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Download fileDegradation Products from Consumer Nanocomposites: A Case Study on Quantum Dot Lighting
journal contribution
posted on 2012-03-20, 00:00 authored by Jingyu Liu, John Katahara, Guanglai Li, Seth Coe-Sullivan, Robert H. HurtMost nanomaterials enter the natural environment as nanoenabled products, which are typically composites with primary nanoparticles
bound on substrates or embedded in liquid or solid matrices. The environmental
risks associated with these products are expected to differ from those
associated with the as-produced particles. This article presents a
case study on the end-of-life emission of a commercial prototype polymer/quantum-dot
(QD) composite used in solid-state lighting for homes. We report the
extent of cadmium release upon exposure to a series of environmental
and biological simulant fluids, and track the loss of QD-characteristic
fluorescence as a marker for chemical damage to the CdSe/ZnS nanoparticles.
Measured cadmium releases after 30-day exposure range from 0.007 to
1.2 mg/g of polymer, and the higher values arise for low-pH simulants
containing nitric or gastric acid. Centrifugal ultrafiltration and
ICP was used to distinguish soluble cadmium from particulate forms.
The leachate is found to contain soluble metals with no evidence of
free QDs or QD-containing polymeric debris. The absence of free nanoparticles
suggests that this product does not raise nanotechnology-specific
environmental issues associated with degradation and leaching, but
is more usefully regarded as a conventional chemical product that
is a potential source of small amounts of soluble cadmium.