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Communication Dans Un Congrès Année : 2016

Evaluation of titanium dioxide nanoparticle heteroaggregation with suspended particulate and natural organic matter analogues

Résumé

The fate of engineered nanoparticles (ENPs) in natural aqueous environments is influenced by ENP dispersion/transport and aggregation/deposition related to environmental factors as well as those intrinsic to the nanoparticles themselves. For example, at environmentally relevant concentrations (μg/L), TiO2 ENPs likely have a higher probability of interacting with suspended particulate matter (SPM) and natural organic matter (NOM) present at mg/L or greater concentrations in natural surface waters, rather than with themselves. With both high specific surface area and reactivity, the SPM and NOM may act as TiO2 ENP carriers in the water column, strongly affecting their fate and transport via the heteroaggregation process. Herein, previously identified and characterized SPM and NOM compositions of the Rhone River, a major European river, were used to guide the selection of relevant analogues for mechanistic evaluation of TiO2 ENP fate in surface waters. The TiO2 ENPs (μg/L) were first spiked into synthetic riverine waters containing one of the main SPM analogues (e.g., quartz, calcite, chlorite, feldspar, muscovite). With rapid heteroaggregation and subsequent sedimentation, the TiO2 ENPs demonstrated a significant affinity for several of the SPM analogues, especially quartz and calcite. In addition to determining the ENP/SPM heteroaggregation kinetics and attachment efficiencies, the influence of NOM on the TiO2 ENP fate and behavior was also assessed. Four common families of NOM analogues (i.e., proteins, polyhydroxy aromatics, polysaccharides, and amino sugars) were added to the SPM-containing synthetic waters to evaluate the role of NOM on the TiO2 ENP compartmentalization. Together, these mechanistic data, coupled to a river-scale fate model,5 will aid in ranking potential TiO2 ENP fate scenarios and assessing their risk within natural aqueous environments. This work was funded by the French National Research Agency and the Swiss FOEN as NANOHETER under the frame of SIINN. http://nanoheter.cerege.fr
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Dates et versions

hal-03572424 , version 1 (24-02-2022)

Identifiants

  • HAL Id : hal-03572424 , version 1

Citer

Danielle L Slomberg, Jérôme Labille, Anne Pariat, Antonia Praetorius, Patrick Ollivier, et al.. Evaluation of titanium dioxide nanoparticle heteroaggregation with suspended particulate and natural organic matter analogues. 11th International Conference on the Environmental Effects of Nanoparticles and Nanomaterials, Aug 2016, Golden, CO, United States. ⟨hal-03572424⟩
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