Publication | Closed Access
Decreasing Uncertainties in Assessing Environmental Exposure, Risk, and Ecological Implications of Nanomaterials
345
Citations
48
References
2009
Year
EngineeringEcological Risk AssessmentNanomaterials RegulationsExposure AssessmentNanotoxicologyNanotechnology IndustryNanomedicineEnvironmental ChemistryGreen NanotechnologyEnvironmental ExposureEnvironmental HealthBioremediationPublic HealthEcotechnologyNanobiomaterialsNanobiotechnologyHuman ExposureNanoscale MaterialsEcotoxicologyEnvironmental Risk AssessmentAssessing Environmental ExposureEnvironmental FateComplex Environmental ContextsNanomaterialsEnvironmental EngineeringEnvironmental RemediationEcological ImplicationsEnvironmental ToxicologyNanomaterials Safety
Determining the fate and interactions of nanomaterials in complex environmental contexts is required to assess exposure and possible harm as well as to inform regulation. As the nanotechnology industry moves up into the rarified air of trillion dollar economics over the next several years (1), the number of simple and complex manufactured nanomaterials (NMs), and their uses, will grow tremendously. Large-scale production of engineered NMs presents the possibility that organisms and ecosystems may be exposed to new levels and qualities of substances with unknown consequences. Naturally occurring nanoscale materials are also ubiquitous in the biosphere, comprising the very building blocks of life and likely playing an important role in ecosystem
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