Water Resources Research Act Program

Details for Project ID 2009IN243B

Environmental Implications of Manufactured Nanomaterials: Silver, Gallium and Indium

Institute: Indiana
Year Established: 2009 Start Date: 2009-03-01 End Date: 2010-02-28
Total Federal Funds: $17,331 Total Non-Federal Funds: $34,791

Principal Investigators: Ronald Turco

Project Summary: The use of nanotechnology has tremendous potential to enable economic growth and is a key feature of sustainable development. Despite the impending increase in industrial production, and the certain releases of nanometals including nanosilver (NAg), Gallium (Ga) and Indium (In) to the environment, scientists and policy makers remain mostly uninformed about their environmental impact.) It has been reported that ultra trace elements used in the electronic and semiconductor industries such as Gallium (Ga) and Indium (In) have potential toxicity as heavy metals (Haley, 1991; Hirano and Suzuki, 1996). This effort builds on project from last year as we have added two more metals and will continue to investigate nanosilver. For Indiana, these metals are important as we are developing a significant program in the area of light emitting diodes (LED) and these metals will play a major role. The inclusion of the Ga and In is made as these metals are finding widespread potential use in the electronics industry. In order to engage in a publicly transparent evaluation of risks and benefits, and to develop public policy and technology to manage potential risks, fundamental scientific research must be completed. The goal of this proposal is to provide information about the impact NAg, NGi and Nil on soil and water systems. This continuation project is developed around the following hypothesis: In soils with low organic matter, exposure to nanometal will cause a dramatic collapse in metabolic abilities and the diversity of soil microbial populations (i.e., Bacteria, Archaea, or Eukarya). We also propose that in higher organic matter soils the response will be less obvious but that the implications to diversity of the soil system will be detectable and significant. The implications of this collapse are tremendous as the soil biology is critical in controlling the environmental fate of many other chemicals. A lowered degradation ability will lessens the soils capacity to respond to other perturbations and increase the opportunity for materials to leach to ground water, for example. The project is based around a series of laboratory studies. Our group has a solid foundation of experience working with nanomaterials in soil and sludge systems. This proposed research program will bring new approaches and scientific data that will improve environmental assessment and policy making for a nascent industrial revolution and potential ecological problem. The application of modern microbiology and biotechnology to environmental assessment can have broad societal and economic impacts. This project will improve the science applied to environmental assessment. The high quality data obtained from this research should positively influence regulatory oversight of the nanomaterial industry and facilitate responsible economic development.