Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - (Page 27) NGWA By CLIFF TREYENS, Director of NGWA The National Ground Water Association held its Water Expo and Annual Meeting at the Las Vegas Convention Center Dec. 2 to 5, 2008. Here is a report from the director of NGWA from one of the sessions. Reports on Nano Potential environmental dangers “The field of nanotechnology is projected to be a $1 trillion business in the next five to 10 years. They are in many consumer products from deodorants to sunscreen and car tires to golf clubs, crossing many industries,” said Colvin. “The question is, do they find their way into aquifers and are they going to be part of drinking water systems?” The same qualities that make nanoparticles so useful and effective can also present dangers to the environment. “Small amounts in mass could be huge amounts in surface area so that you could moderate and change environmental processes drastically,” she said. Among the potential issues: • Nanoparticles could facilitate the transport of contaminants • The reactive properties of some nanoparticles could create unwanted byproducts • At its atomic-scale size, nanoparticles could invade and affect biological organisms in ways larger particles cannot • They could persist in the environment for a long time. “For all those reasons, we want to be cautious with them. The science of application of nanoparticles has been around for 10 years or longer. What’s newer and less evolved is the science of how to deal with the unwanted consequences,” said Colvin. This evolving science is complicated by the fact that it can be difficult to differentiate between naturally occurring and manmade nanoparticles. “My take-home message is that nanoparticles are already out there in nature. People already are dealing with them and don’t know it,” she said. “And, we don’t want to make the same mistakes as in the past by introducing technologies that create problems.” PE For more information about NGWA, visit www.ngwa.org. Visit www.pollutionengineering.com to electronically forward a copy of this article to a colleague or customer. The National Ground Water Association provides some insight from a presentation at its annual meeting. N anotechnology, the science of matter on the atomic scale, offers promise for making water clean and safe for the world’s citizens, but care also should be taken to study possible unwanted environmental side effects, says researcher Vicki Colvin, Ph.D., of Rice University. A “nanoparticle” is 1 to 100 nanometers in diameter – a nanometer being one billionth of a meter in length. While some nanoparticles occur naturally, nanotechnology has resulted in the development of nanoparticles that have very specific properties. In the context of remediating contaminated water, two such properties are: • Sequestration, where the nanoparticle locks up a contaminant to prevent harm, and • Reaction, where a nanoparticle reacts with another substance to render it harmless. “The real benefits to ground water are all related to the surface area of nanoparticles. A gram of nanoparticle material might have the surface area of a football field. Nanoparticles have huge surface areas for reaction and sequestrations,” said Colvin in her presentation, Nanotechnology in the Environment: Clean Water from Small Materials. Another advantage to nanoparticles is that they are so small they do not settle in water but are a part of the water flow, thus facilitating their ability to react with or sequester contaminants downstream. Colvin said the ability to design and produce nanoparticles to do very specific things is so good that “you can make a nano-anything these days.” JANUARY2009 www.pollutionengineering.com 27 http://www.ngwa.org http://www.pollutionengineering.com http://www.pollutionengineering.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Pollution Engineering - January 2009 Pollution Engineering - January 2009 Contents The Editor’s Desk EnviroNews PE Events Legal Lookout Green Connections Ten Top Technologies for 2009 Old Fashioned Chemistry Emitting Education NGWA Reports from Its Annual Meeting A Wood and a Pond Company Technical Profiles Filtration/Membrane Products Flow and Level Monitoring Equipment Classified Marketplace Advertisers Index State Rules Pollution Engineering - January 2009 Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - (Page IntroA) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - Pollution Engineering - January 2009 (Page Cover1) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - Pollution Engineering - January 2009 (Page Cover2) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - Pollution Engineering - January 2009 (Page 3) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - Contents (Page 4) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - Contents (Page 5) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - Contents (Page 6) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - The Editor’s Desk (Page 7) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - The Editor’s Desk (Page 8) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - PE Events (Page 9) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - PE Events (Page 10) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - PE Events (Page 11) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - PE Events (Page 12) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - PE Events (Page 13) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - PE Events (Page 14) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - Legal Lookout (Page 15) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - Legal Lookout (Page 16) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - Green Connections (Page 17) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - Ten Top Technologies for 2009 (Page 18) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - Ten Top Technologies for 2009 (Page 19) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - Ten Top Technologies for 2009 (Page 20) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - Ten Top Technologies for 2009 (Page 21) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - Ten Top Technologies for 2009 (Page 22) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - Old Fashioned Chemistry (Page 23) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - Emitting Education (Page 24) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - Emitting Education (Page 25) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - Emitting Education (Page 26) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - NGWA Reports from Its Annual Meeting (Page 27) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - A Wood and a Pond (Page 28) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - A Wood and a Pond (Page 29) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - Company Technical Profiles (Page 30) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - Company Technical Profiles (Page 31) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - Company Technical Profiles (Page 32) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - Company Technical Profiles (Page 33) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - Company Technical Profiles (Page 34) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - Company Technical Profiles (Page 35) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - Company Technical Profiles (Page 36) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - Company Technical Profiles (Page 37) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - Company Technical Profiles (Page 38) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - Company Technical Profiles (Page 39) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - Company Technical Profiles (Page 40) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - Company Technical Profiles (Page 41) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - Company Technical Profiles (Page 42) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - Company Technical Profiles (Page 43) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - Company Technical Profiles (Page 44) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - Company Technical Profiles (Page 45) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - Company Technical Profiles (Page 46) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - Company Technical Profiles (Page 47) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - Company Technical Profiles (Page 48) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - Flow and Level Monitoring Equipment (Page 49) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - Flow and Level Monitoring Equipment (Page 50) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - Classified Marketplace (Page 51) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - Classified Marketplace (Page 52) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - Classified Marketplace (Page 53) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - Classified Marketplace (Page 54) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - Classified Marketplace (Page 55) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - Classified Marketplace (Page 56) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - Advertisers Index (Page 57) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - State Rules (Page 58) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - State Rules (Page Cover3) Pollution Engineering - January 2009 - State Rules (Page Cover4)
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