Nanotechnology ("nanotech") is the
manipulation of matter on an atomic, molecular, and supramolecular scale. The earliest,
widespread description of nanotechnology referred to the particular
technological goal of precisely manipulating atoms and molecules for
fabrication of macroscale products, also now referred to as molecular nanotechnology. A more
generalized description of nanotechnology was subsequently established by the National Nanotechnology Initiative,
which defines nanotechnology as the manipulation of matter with at least one
dimension sized from 1 to 100 nanometers. This definition reflects the fact that quantum
mechanical effects are important at this quantum-realm
scale, and so the definition shifted from a particular technological goal to a
research category inclusive of all types of research and technologies that deal
with the special properties of matter that occur below the given size
threshold. It is therefore common to see the plural form
"nanotechnologies" as well as "nanoscale technologies" to
refer to the broad range of research and applications whose common trait is size.
Because of the variety of potential applications (including industrial and
military), governments have invested billions of dollars in nanotechnology
research. Through its National Nanotechnology Initiative, the USA has invested
3.7 billion dollars. The European Union has invested 1.2 billion and Japan 750 million dollars.
Nanotechnology as defined by size is naturally very broad,
including fields of science as diverse as surface
science, organic chemistry, molecular
biology, semiconductor physics, microfabrication,
etc. The associated research and applications are equally diverse, ranging from
extensions of conventional device physics to completely new approaches
based upon molecular self-assembly, from developing new
materials with dimensions on the nanoscale to direct control of matter on the atomic scale.
Scientists currently debate the future implications of nanotechnology.
Nanotechnology may be able to create many new materials and devices with a vast
range of applications, such as in medicine,
electronics,
biomaterials
and energy production. On the other hand, nanotechnology raises many of the
same issues as any new technology, including concerns about the toxicity
and environmental impact of nanomaterials,[5]
and their potential effects on global economics, as well as speculation about
various doomsday
scenarios. These concerns have led to a debate among advocacy groups and
governments on whether special regulation of nanotechnology is warranted.
Origins
The concepts that seeded nanotechnology were first discussed
in 1959 by renowned physicist Richard
Feynman in his talk There's Plenty of Room at the
Bottom, in which he described the possibility of synthesis via direct
manipulation of atoms. The term "nano-technology" was first used by Norio
Taniguchi in 1974, though it was not widely known.
Inspired by Feynman's concepts, K.
Eric Drexler independently used the term "nanotechnology" in his
1986 book Engines of Creation: The Coming Era of
Nanotechnology, which proposed the idea of a nanoscale
"assembler" which would be able to build a copy of itself and of
other items of arbitrary complexity with atomic control. Also in 1986, Drexler
co-founded The Foresight Institute (with which he is
no longer affiliated) to help increase public awareness and understanding of
nanotechnology concepts and implications.
Thus, emergence of nanotechnology as a field in the 1980s
occurred through convergence of Drexler's theoretical and public work, which
developed and popularized a conceptual framework for nanotechnology, and
high-visibility experimental advances that drew additional wide-scale attention
to the prospects of atomic control of matter.
For example, the invention of the scanning tunneling microscope in 1981
provided unprecedented visualization of individual atoms and bonds, and was
successfully used to manipulate individual atoms in 1989. The microscope's
developers Gerd Binnig and Heinrich
Rohrer at IBM Zurich Research Laboratory
received a Nobel Prize in Physics in 1986. Binnig, Quate
and Gerber also invented the analogous atomic force microscope that year.
Fullerenes were discovered in 1985 by Harry Kroto,
Richard
Smalley, and Robert Curl, who together won the 1996 Nobel Prize in Chemistry. C60
was not initially described as nanotechnology; the term was used regarding
subsequent work with related graphene tubes (called carbon
nanotubes and sometimes called Bucky tubes) which suggested potential
applications for nanoscale electronics and devices.
In the early 2000s, the field garnered increased scientific,
political, and commercial attention that led to both controversy and progress.
Controversies emerged regarding the definitions and potential implications of
nanotechnologies, exemplified by the Royal
Society's report on nanotechnology.Challenges were raised regarding the
feasibility of applications envisioned by advocates of molecular
nanotechnology, which culminated in a public debate between Drexler and Smalley
in 2001 and 2003.
Meanwhile, commercialization of products based on
advancements in nanoscale technologies began emerging. These products are
limited to bulk applications of nanomaterials
and do not involve atomic control of matter. Some examples include the Silver Nano
platform for using silver nanoparticles as an antibacterial
agent, nanoparticle-based
transparent sunscreens, and carbon
nanotubes for stain-resistant textiles.
Governments moved to promote and fund research into nanotechnology, beginning in
the U.S. with the National Nanotechnology Initiative,
which formalized a size-based definition of nanotechnology and established
funding for research on the nanoscale.
By the mid-2000s new and serious scientific attention began
to flourish. Projects emerged to produce nanotechnology roadmaps which center on atomically precise
manipulation of matter and discuss existing and projected capabilities, goals,
and applications.
Fundamental concepts
Nanotechnology is the engineering of functional systems at
the molecular scale. This covers both current work and concepts that are more
advanced. In its original sense, nanotechnology refers to the projected ability
to construct items from the bottom up, using techniques and tools being
developed today to make complete, high performance products.
One nanometer (nm) is one billionth, or 10−9, of a
meter. By comparison, typical carbon-carbon bond
lengths, or the spacing between these atoms in a molecule, are
in the range 0.12–0.15 nm, and a DNA double-helix has a diameter around 2 nm. On the other
hand, the smallest cellular life-forms, the bacteria of the genus Mycoplasma,
are around 200 nm in length. By convention, nanotechnology is taken as the
scale range 1 to 100 nm following the definition used by the National
Nanotechnology Initiative in the US. The lower limit is set by the size of
atoms (hydrogen has the smallest atoms, which are approximately a quarter of a
nm diameter) since nanotechnology must build its devices from atoms and
molecules. The upper limit is more or less arbitrary but is around the size
that phenomena not observed in larger structures start to become apparent and
can be made use of in the nano device.These new phenomena make nanotechnology
distinct from devices which are merely miniaturised versions of an equivalent macroscopic
device; such devices are on a larger scale and come under the description of microtechnology.
To put that scale in another context, the comparative size
of a nanometer to a meter is the same as that of a marble to the size of the
earth. Or another way of putting it: a nanometer is the amount an average man's
beard grows in the time it takes him to raise the razor to his face.
Two main approaches are used in nanotechnology. In the
"bottom-up" approach, materials and devices are built from molecular
components which assemble themselves chemically by principles of molecular recognition. In the
"top-down" approach, nano-objects are constructed from larger
entities without atomic-level control.
Areas of physics such as nanoelectronics,
nanomechanics,
nanophotonics
and nanoionics
have evolved during the last few decades to provide a basic scientific
foundation of nanotechnology.
Larger to smaller: a materials perspective
Image of reconstruction on a clean Gold(100)
surface, as visualized using scanning tunneling microscopy. The
positions of the individual atoms composing the surface are visible.
Several phenomena become pronounced as the size of the
system decreases. These include statistical mechanical effects, as well as quantum
mechanical effects, for example the “quantum size
effect” where the electronic properties of solids are altered with great
reductions in particle size. This effect does not come into play by going from
macro to micro dimensions. However, quantum effects can become significant when
the nanometer size range is reached, typically at distances of 100 nanometers
or less, the so-called quantum realm. Additionally, a number of physical
(mechanical, electrical, optical, etc.) properties change when compared to
macroscopic systems. One example is the increase in surface area to volume
ratio altering mechanical, thermal and catalytic properties of materials.
Diffusion and reactions at nanoscale, nanostructures materials and nanodevices
with fast ion transport are generally referred to nanoionics. Mechanical
properties of nanosystems are of interest in the nanomechanics research. The
catalytic activity of nanomaterials also opens potential risks in their
interaction with biomaterials.
Materials reduced to the nanoscale can show different
properties compared to what they exhibit on a macroscale, enabling unique
applications. For instance, opaque substances can become transparent (copper);
stable materials can turn combustible (aluminum); insoluble materials may
become soluble (gold). A material such as gold, which is chemically inert at
normal scales, can serve as a potent chemical catalyst at
nanoscales. Much of the fascination with nanotechnology stems from these
quantum and surface phenomena that matter exhibits at the nanoscale.
Simple to complex: a molecular perspective
Modern synthetic chemistry has reached the point where
it is possible to prepare small molecules to almost any structure. These
methods are used today to manufacture a wide variety of useful chemicals such
as pharmaceuticals
or commercial polymers.
This ability raises the question of extending this kind of control to the
next-larger level, seeking methods to assemble these single molecules into supramolecular assemblies consisting of
many molecules arranged in a well defined manner.
These approaches utilize the concepts of molecular
self-assembly and/or supramolecular chemistry to automatically
arrange themselves into some useful conformation through a bottom-up approach. The concept of molecular
recognition is especially important: molecules can be designed so that a
specific configuration or arrangement is favored due to non-covalent intermolecular forces. The Watson–Crick basepairing
rules are a direct result of this, as is the specificity of an enzyme being
targeted to a single substrate, or the specific folding
of the protein itself. Thus, two or more components can be designed to be
complementary and mutually attractive so that they make a more complex and
useful whole.
Such bottom-up approaches should be capable of producing
devices in parallel and be much cheaper than top-down methods, but could
potentially be overwhelmed as the size and complexity of the desired assembly
increases. Most useful structures require complex and thermodynamically
unlikely arrangements of atoms. Nevertheless, there are many examples of
self-assembly based on molecular recognition in biology, most
notably Watson–Crick basepairing and enzyme-substrate interactions. The
challenge for nanotechnology is whether these principles can be used to
engineer new constructs in addition to natural ones.
Molecular nanotechnology: a long-term view
Molecular nanotechnology, sometimes called molecular
manufacturing, describes engineered nanosystems (nanoscale machines) operating
on the molecular scale. Molecular nanotechnology is especially associated with
the molecular assembler, a machine that can produce
a desired structure or device atom-by-atom using the principles of mechanosynthesis.
Manufacturing in the context of productive nanosystems is not related to,
and should be clearly distinguished from, the conventional technologies used to
manufacture nanomaterials such as carbon nanotubes and nanoparticles.
When the term "nanotechnology" was independently
coined and popularized by Eric Drexler (who at the time was unaware of an earlier usage by Norio Taniguchi) it
referred to a future manufacturing technology based on molecular
machine systems. The premise was that molecular scale biological analogies
of traditional machine components demonstrated molecular machines were
possible: by the countless examples found in biology, it is known that
sophisticated, stochastically optimised biological machines can be
produced.
It is hoped that developments in nanotechnology will make
possible their construction by some other means, perhaps using biomimetic
principles. However, Drexler and other researchers have proposed that advanced nanotechnology,
although perhaps initially implemented by biomimetic means, ultimately could be
based on mechanical engineering principles, namely, a manufacturing technology
based on the mechanical functionality of these components (such as gears,
bearings, motors, and structural members) that would enable programmable,
positional assembly to atomic specification.The physics and engineering
performance of exemplar designs were analyzed in Drexler's book Nanosystems.
In general it is very difficult to assemble devices on the
atomic scale, as one has to position atoms on other atoms of comparable size
and stickiness. Another view, put forth by Carlo Montemagno, is that future
nanosystems will be hybrids of silicon technology and biological molecular
machines. Richard Smalley argued that mechanosynthesis are impossible due to
the difficulties in mechanically manipulating individual molecules.
This led to an exchange of letters in the ACS publication Chemical & Engineering News in
2003. Though biology clearly demonstrates that molecular machine systems are
possible, non-biological molecular machines are today only in their infancy.
Leaders in research on non-biological molecular machines are Dr. Alex Zettl
and his colleagues at Lawrence Berkeley Laboratories and UC Berkeley. They have
constructed at least three distinct molecular devices whose motion is
controlled from the desktop with changing voltage: a nanotube nanomotor, a
molecular actuator, and a nanoelectromechanical relaxation oscillator.
An experiment indicating that positional molecular assembly
is possible was performed by Ho and Lee at Cornell University in 1999. They used a scanning
tunneling microscope to move an individual carbon monoxide molecule (CO) to an
individual iron atom (Fe) sitting on a flat silver crystal, and chemically
bound the CO to the Fe by applying a voltage.
This device transfers energy from nano-thin layers of quantum
wells to nanocrystals above them, causing the nanocrystals to emit
visible light.
Nanomaterials
The nanomaterials field includes subfields which develop or
study materials having unique properties arising from their nanoscale
dimensions.
- Interface and colloid science has given rise to many materials which may be useful in nanotechnology, such as carbon nanotubes and other fullerenes, and various nanoparticles and nanorods. Nanomaterials with fast ion transport are related also to nanoionics and nanoelectronics.
- Nanoscale materials can also be used for bulk applications; most present commercial applications of nanotechnology are of this flavor.
- Progress has been made in using these materials for medical applications; see Nanomedicine.
- Nanoscale materials such as nanopillars are sometimes used in solar cells which combats the cost of traditional Silicon solar cells.
- Development of applications incorporating semiconductor nanoparticles to be used in the next generation of products, such as display technology, lighting, solar cells and biological imaging; see quantum dots.
Bottom-up approaches
These seek to arrange smaller components into more complex
assemblies.
- DNA nanotechnology utilizes the specificity of Watson–Crick basepairing to construct well-defined structures out of DNA and other nucleic acids.
- Approaches from the field of "classical" chemical synthesis (inorganic and organic synthesis) also aim at designing molecules with well-defined shape (e.g. bis-peptides).
- More generally, molecular self-assembly seeks to use concepts of supramolecular chemistry, and molecular recognition in particular, to cause single-molecule components to automatically arrange themselves into some useful conformation.
- Atomic force microscope tips can be used as a nanoscale "write head" to deposit a chemical upon a surface in a desired pattern in a process called dip pen nanolithography. This technique fits into the larger subfield of nanolithography.
Top-down approaches
These seek to create smaller devices by using larger ones to
direct their assembly.
- Many technologies that descended from conventional solid-state silicon methods for fabricating microprocessors are now capable of creating features smaller than 100 nm, falling under the definition of nanotechnology. Giant magnetoresistance-based hard drives already on the market fit this description,[31] as do atomic layer deposition (ALD) techniques. Peter Grünberg and Albert Fert received the Nobel Prize in Physics in 2007 for their discovery of Giant magnetoresistance and contributions to the field of spintronics.
- Solid-state techniques can also be used to create devices known as nanoelectromechanical systems or NEMS, which are related to microelectromechanical systems or MEMS.
- Focused ion beams can directly remove material, or even deposit material when suitable precursor gasses are applied at the same time. For example, this technique is used routinely to create sub-100 nm sections of material for analysis in Transmission electron microscopy.
- Atomic force microscope tips can be used as a nanoscale "write head" to deposit a resist, which is then followed by an etching process to remove material in a top-down method.
Functional approaches
These seek to develop components of a desired functionality
without regard to how they might be assembled.
- Molecular scale electronics seeks to develop molecules with useful electronic properties. These could then be used as single-molecule components in a nanoelectronic device. For an example see rotaxane.
- Synthetic chemical methods can also be used to create synthetic molecular motors, such as in a so-called nanocar.
Biomimetic approaches
- Bionics or biomimicry seeks to apply biological methods and systems found in nature, to the study and design of engineering systems and modern technology. Biomineralization is one example of the systems studied.
- Bionanotechnology is the use of biomolecules for applications in nanotechnology, including use of viruses and lipid assemblies. Nanocellulose is a potential bulk-scale application.
Speculative
These subfields seek to anticipate
what inventions nanotechnology might yield, or attempt to propose an agenda
along which inquiry might progress. These often take a big-picture view of
nanotechnology, with more emphasis on its societal implications than the
details of how such inventions could actually be created.
- Molecular nanotechnology is a proposed approach which involves manipulating single molecules in finely controlled, deterministic ways. This is more theoretical than the other subfields, and many of its proposed techniques are beyond current capabilities.
- Nanorobotics centers on self-sufficient machines of some functionality operating at the nanoscale. There are hopes for applying nanorobots in medicine, but it may not be easy to do such a thing because of several drawbacks of such devices. Nevertheless, progress on innovative materials and methodologies has been demonstrated with some patents granted about new nanomanufacturing devices for future commercial applications, which also progressively helps in the development towards nanorobots with the use of embedded nanobioelectronics concepts.
- Productive nanosystems are "systems of nanosystems" which will be complex nanosystems that produce atomically precise parts for other nanosystems, not necessarily using novel nanoscale-emergent properties, but well-understood fundamentals of manufacturing. Because of the discrete (i.e. atomic) nature of matter and the possibility of exponential growth, this stage is seen as the basis of another industrial revolution. Mihail Roco, one of the architects of the USA's National Nanotechnology Initiative, has proposed four states of nanotechnology that seem to parallel the technical progress of the Industrial Revolution, progressing from passive nanostructures to active nanodevices to complex nanomachines and ultimately to productive nanosystems.
- Programmable matter seeks to design materials whose properties can be easily, reversibly and externally controlled though a fusion of information science and materials science.
- Due to the popularity and media exposure of the term nanotechnology, the words picotechnology and femtotechnology have been coined in analogy to it, although these are only used rarely and informally.
Tools and techniques
Typical AFM setup. A microfabricated cantilever
with a sharp tip is deflected by features on a sample surface, much like in a phonograph
but on a much smaller scale. A laser beam reflects off the backside of the cantilever into a
set of photodetectors, allowing the deflection to be measured
and assembled into an image of the surface.
There are several important modern developments. The atomic
force microscope (AFM) and the Scanning Tunneling Microscope (STM)
are two early versions of scanning probes that launched nanotechnology. There
are other types of scanning probe microscopy. Although
conceptually similar to the scanning confocal microscope developed by Marvin
Minsky in 1961 and the scanning acoustic microscope (SAM)
developed by Calvin Quate and coworkers in the 1970s, newer scanning
probe microscopes have much higher resolution, since they are not limited by
the wavelength of sound or light.
The tip of a scanning probe can also be used to manipulate
nanostructures (a process called positional assembly). Feature-oriented scanning methodology
suggested by Rostislav Lapshin appears to be a promising way to implement these
nanomanipulations in automatic mode. However, this is still a slow process
because of low scanning velocity of the microscope.
Various techniques of nanolithography such as optical lithography, X-ray
lithography dip pen nanolithography, electron beam lithography or nanoimprint lithography were also
developed. Lithography is a top-down fabrication technique where a bulk
material is reduced in size to nanoscale pattern.
Another group of nanotechnological techniques include those
used for fabrication of nanotubes and nanowires, those used in
semiconductor fabrication such as deep ultraviolet lithography, electron beam
lithography, focused ion beam machining, nanoimprint lithography, atomic layer
deposition, and molecular vapor deposition, and further including molecular
self-assembly techniques such as those employing di-block copolymers. The
precursors of these techniques preceded the nanotech era, and are extensions in
the development of scientific advancements rather than techniques which were
devised with the sole purpose of creating nanotechnology and which were results
of nanotechnology research.
The top-down approach anticipates nanodevices that must be
built piece by piece in stages, much as manufactured items are made. Scanning
probe microscopy is an important technique both for characterization and
synthesis of nanomaterials. Atomic force microscopes and scanning tunneling
microscopes can be used to look at surfaces and to move atoms around. By
designing different tips for these microscopes, they can be used for carving
out structures on surfaces and to help guide self-assembling structures. By
using, for example, feature-oriented scanning approach, atoms or molecules can
be moved around on a surface with scanning probe microscopy techniques. At
present, it is expensive and time-consuming for mass production but very
suitable for laboratory experimentation.
In contrast, bottom-up techniques build or grow larger
structures atom by atom or molecule by molecule. These techniques include
chemical synthesis, self-assembly and positional assembly. Dual polarisation interferometry
is one tool suitable for characterisation of self assembled thin films. Another
variation of the bottom-up approach is molecular beam epitaxy or MBE. Researchers
at Bell Telephone Laboratories like John
R. Arthur. Alfred Y. Cho, and Art C. Gossard developed and implemented MBE as a
research tool in the late 1960s and 1970s. Samples made by MBE were key to the
discovery of the fractional quantum Hall effect for which the 1998 Nobel Prize
in Physics was awarded. MBE allows scientists to lay down atomically precise
layers of atoms and, in the process, build up complex structures. Important for
research on semiconductors, MBE is also widely used to make samples and devices
for the newly emerging field of spintronics.
However, new therapeutic products, based on responsive
nanomaterials, such as the ultradeformable, stress-sensitive Transfersome
vesicles, are under development and already approved for human use in some
countries.
Applications
One of the major applications of nanotechnology is in the
area of nanoelectronics with MOSFET's being made of small nanowires ~10
nm in length. Here is a simulation of such a nanowire.
Nanostructures provide this surface with superhydrophobicity, which lets water
droplets roll down the inclined plane.
As of August 21, 2008, the Project on Emerging
Nanotechnologies estimates that over 800 manufacturer-identified nanotech
products are publicly available, with new ones hitting the market at a pace of
3–4 per week.[13]
The project lists all of the products in a publicly accessible online database.
Most applications are limited to the use of "first generation"
passive nanomaterials which includes titanium dioxide in sunscreen, cosmetics,
surface coatings, and some food products; Carbon allotropes used to produce gecko tape;
silver in food packaging, clothing, disinfectants and household appliances;
zinc oxide in sunscreens and cosmetics, surface coatings, paints and outdoor
furniture varnishes; and cerium oxide as a fuel catalyst.
Further applications allow tennis
balls to last longer, golf balls to fly straighter, and even bowling
balls to become more durable and have a harder surface. Trousers and socks have been
infused with nanotechnology so that they will last longer and keep people cool
in the summer. Bandages
are being infused with silver nanoparticles to heal cuts faster. Cars are being
manufactured with nanomaterials so they may need fewer metals and less fuel to operate in the
future.[47]
Video game consoles and personal
computers may become cheaper, faster, and contain more memory thanks to
nanotechnology. Nanotechnology may have the ability to make existing medical
applications cheaper and easier to use in places like the general practitioner's office and at home.
The National Science Foundation (a major
distributor for nanotechnology research in the United States) funded researcher
David Berube to study the field of nanotechnology. His findings are published
in the monograph Nano-Hype: The Truth Behind the Nanotechnology Buzz. This
study concludes that much of what is sold as “nanotechnology” is in fact a
recasting of straightforward materials science, which is leading to a “nanotech
industry built solely on selling nanotubes, nanowires, and the like” which will
“end up with a few suppliers selling low margin products in huge volumes."
Further applications which require actual manipulation or arrangement of
nanoscale components await further research. Though technologies branded with
the term 'nano' are sometimes little related to and fall far short of the most
ambitious and transformative technological goals of the sort in molecular
manufacturing proposals, the term still connotes such ideas. According to
Berube, there may be a danger that a "nano bubble" will form, or is
forming already, from the use of the term by scientists and entrepreneurs to
garner funding, regardless of interest in the transformative possibilities of
more ambitious and far-sighted work.
Researchers have successfully used DNA origami-based
nanobots capable of carrying out logic functions to achieve targeted drug
delivery in cockroaches. It is said that the computational power of these
nanobots can be scaled up to that of a Commodore
64.
Implications
An area of concern is the effect that industrial-scale
manufacturing and use of nanomaterials would have on human health and the
environment, as suggested by nanotoxicology
research. For these reasons, some groups advocate that nanotechnology be
regulated by governments. Others counter that overregulation would stifle
scientific research and the development of beneficial innovations. Public
health research agencies, such as the National
Institute for Occupational Safety and Health are actively conducting
research on potential health effects stemming from exposures to nanoparticles.
Some nanoparticle products may have unintended consequences. Researchers have
discovered that bacteriostatic silver nanoparticles used in socks to
reduce foot odor are being released in the wash. These particles are then
flushed into the waste water stream and may destroy bacteria which are critical
components of natural ecosystems, farms, and waste treatment processes.
Public deliberations on risk
perception in the US and UK carried out by the Center for Nanotechnology in
Society found that participants were more positive about nanotechnologies for
energy applications than for health applications, with health applications
raising moral and ethical dilemmas such as cost and availability.
Experts, including director of the Woodrow Wilson Center's
Project on Emerging Nanotechnologies David Rejeski, have testified that successful commercialization depends on
adequate oversight, risk research strategy, and public engagement. Berkeley, California is currently the only
city in the United States to regulate nanotechnology; Cambridge, Massachusetts in 2008
considered enacting a similar law, but ultimately rejected it. Relevant for
both research on and application of nanotechnologies, the insurability
of nanotechnology is contested. Without state regulation of nanotechnology, the
availability of private insurance for potential damages is seen as necessary to
ensure that burdens are not socialised implicitly.
Health and environmental concerns
Nanofibers are used in several areas and in different
products, in everything from aircraft wings to tennis rackets. Inhaling
airborne nanoparticles and nanofibers may lead to a number of pulmonary
diseases, e.g. fibrosis. Researchers have found that when rats breathed in
nanoparticles, the particles settled in the brain and lungs, which led to
significant increases in biomarkers for inflammation and stress response and that nanoparticles induce skin aging
through oxidative stress in hairless mice.
A two-year study at UCLA's School of Public Health found lab
mice consuming nano-titanium dioxide showed DNA and chromosome damage to a
degree "linked to all the big killers of man, namely cancer, heart
disease, neurological disease and aging".
A major study published more recently in Nature Nanotechnology suggests some forms of
carbon nanotubes – a poster child for the “nanotechnology revolution” – could
be as harmful as asbestos if inhaled in sufficient quantities. Anthony
Seaton of the Institute of Occupational Medicine in Edinburgh, Scotland,
who contributed to the article on carbon
nanotubes said "We know that some of them probably have the potential
to cause mesothelioma. So those sorts of materials need to be handled very
carefully." In the absence of specific regulation forthcoming from
governments, Paull and Lyons (2008) have called for an exclusion of engineered
nanoparticles in food. A newspaper article reports that workers in a paint
factory developed serious lung disease and nanoparticles were found in their
lungs.
Regulation
Calls for tighter regulation of nanotechnology have occurred
alongside a growing debate related to the human health and safety risks of
nanotechnology. There is significant debate about who is responsible for the
regulation of nanotechnology. Some regulatory agencies currently cover some
nanotechnology products and processes (to varying degrees) – by “bolting on”
nanotechnology to existing regulations – there are clear gaps in these regimes.
Davies (2008) has proposed a regulatory road map describing steps to deal with
these shortcomings.
Stakeholders concerned by the lack of a regulatory framework
to assess and control risks associated with the release of nanoparticles and
nanotubes have drawn parallels with bovine spongiform encephalopathy
("mad cow" disease), thalidomide,
genetically modified food, nuclear energy, reproductive technologies,
biotechnology, and asbestosis. Dr. Andrew Maynard, chief science advisor to
the Woodrow Wilson Center’s Project on Emerging Nanotechnologies, concludes
that there is insufficient funding for human health and safety research, and as
a result there is currently limited understanding of the human health and
safety risks associated with nanotechnology. As a result, some academics have
called for stricter application of the precautionary principle, with delayed
marketing approval, enhanced labelling and additional safety data development
requirements in relation to certain forms of nanotechnology.
The Royal Society report identified a risk of nanoparticles or
nanotubes being released during disposal, destruction and recycling, and
recommended that “manufacturers of products that fall under extended producer
responsibility regimes such as end-of-life regulations publish procedures
outlining how these materials will be managed to minimize possible human and
environmental exposure” (p. xiii). Reflecting the challenges for ensuring
responsible life cycle regulation, the Institute
for Food and Agricultural Standards has proposed that standards for
nanotechnology research and development should be integrated across consumer,
worker and environmental standards. They also propose that NGOs and other citizen groups play a
meaningful role in the development of these standards.
The Center for Nanotechnology in Society has found that
people respond to nanotechnologies differently, depending on application – with
participants in public deliberations more positive about
nanotechnologies for energy than health applications – suggesting that any
public calls for nano regulations may differ by technology sector.
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