MU engineer concerned about
environmental impact of silver nanoparticles in wastewater treatment
COLUMBIA, Mo. –Too much of a good thing could be harmful to the
environment. For years, scientists have known about silver’s ability to
kill harmful bacteria and, recently, have used this knowledge to create
consumer products containing silver nanoparticles. Now, a University of
Missouri researcher has found that silver nanoparticles also may destroy
benign bacteria that are used to remove ammonia from wastewater treatment
systems. The study was funded by a grant from the National Science
Foundation.
Several products containing silver nanoparticles already are on the
market, including socks containing silver nanoparticles designed to
inhibit odor-causing bacteria and high-tech, energy-efficient washing
machines that disinfect clothes by generating the tiny particles. The
positive effects of that technology may be overshadowed by the potential
negative environmental impact.
“Because of the increasing use of silver nanoparticles in consumer
products, the risk that this material will be released into sewage lines,
wastewater treatment facilities, and, eventually, to rivers, streams and
lakes is of concern,” said Zhiqiang Hu, assistant professor of civil and
environmental engineering in MU’s College of Engineering. “We found that
silver nanoparticles are extremely toxic. The nanoparticles destroy the
benign species of bacteria that are used for wastewater treatment. It
basically halts the reproduction activity of the good bacteria.”
Hu said silver nanoparticles generate more unique chemicals, known as
highly reactive oxygen species, than do larger forms of silver. These
oxygen species chemicals likely inhibit bacterial growth. For example, the
use of wastewater treatment “sludge” as land-application fertilizer is a
common practice, according to Hu. If high levels of silver nanoparticles
are present in the sludge, soil used to grow food crops may be harmed.
Hu is launching a second study to determine the levels at which the
presence of silver nanoparticles become toxic. He will determine how
silver nanoparticles affect wastewater treatment processes by introducing
nanomaterial into wastewater and sludge. He will then measure microbial
growth to determine the nanosilver levels that harm wastewater treatment
and sludge digestion.
The Water Environment Research Foundation recently awarded Hu $150,000
to determine when silver nanoparticles start to impair wastewater
treatment. Hu said nanoparticles in wastewater can be better managed and
regulated. Work on the follow-up research should be completed by 2010.
The silver nanoparticle research conducted by Hu and his graduate
student, Okkyoung Choi, was recently published in Water Research and
Environmental Science & Technology.
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