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Ground Water Clean-Up Nanoparticles
are 1,000 Times Thinner
Than Human Hair
This
one looks like a "keeper"
BETHLEHEM, PA., Mar. 13
-/E-Wire/ --At a size 1,000 times thinner than a
human hair, magnetic
nanoparticles are easy to overlook. But add the minute
Herculean particles to
contaminated groundwater, and they may just change
the world.
So says a
team of environmental engineers who have pioneered and tested a
new
technology using nanoparticles that can cleanse polluted underground
aquifers
that provide drinking water to an increasingly thirsty world.
Wei-xian Zhang,
associate professor of civil and environmental engineering
at Lehigh
University, Bethlehem, Pa., has a patent pending for his
remediation method
and has licensed the technology to two environmental
companies. He also
recently received a grant from the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency to
explore the potential for using nanoparticles to treat
hazardous
waste.
"Nanoparticles have been used in chemical processing and
electrical
engineering for years, but as far as I know, we are the first to
use them
for groundwater cleanup,'' says Zhang. "The potential of this
technology to
help improve the environment is enormous and truly has
global
implications.''
Nanotechnology involves pumping "nanoparticles'' --
minute, magnetic, iron-
based particles so small that 100,000 would fit on
the head of a pin, into
the groundwater. With a composition that is 99.9
percent iron and less than
0.1 percent palladium, nanoparticles have a large
relative surface area and
a high rate of reactivity -- and they race through
groundwater like
bloodthirsty mosquitoes searching for prey.
When applied
to water or soil contaminated with carcinogenic solvents used
in dry cleaning
and industrial processes, nanoparticles remove chlorine and
convert the
solvents to harmless hydrocarbons and chlorides commonly found
in table salt.
The approach is dramatically more effective than traditional
cleanup methods
that require water to be pumped out, treated, then
disposed
of.
Nanoparticle technology offers the potential for significant
savings. For
example, a $20-million clean-up project might cost $5 million,
says Zhang,
and nationwide savings could be staggering when you consider that
the U.S.
government alone projects spending $750 billion in the next 30 years
to
clean up contaminated groundwater.
The method also holds promise for
reducing the impact of bioterrorist
attempts to contaminate water because
nanoparticles can reduce biological
and chemical agents quickly, according to
Zhang. For example, Lehigh
researchers say the tiny particles were tested and
found effective in
detoxifying cyanide. The technology also might offer a
safer, cheaper, and
faster way to clean up nuclear waste and Superfund
sites.
The effectiveness of the new technology was demonstrated at the Trance
Co.
recently at its Trenton N.J. manufacturing plant. Trane, a maker of
air
conditioning systems, has been investigating a toxic trichloroethene
(TCE)
plume for several years. The company put nanoparticles to work in
several
monitoring wells. Samples taken from the wells 12 hours after
the
nanoparticles had been injected showed that as much as 96 percent of the
TCE
was reduced to harmless ethylene and ethane.
"This is the first
technology that we have found that has the potential to
clean up the
thousands of sites in many industries in the U.S., where
currently nothing is
happening,'' says Chang Tai, environmental and safety
engineer for
Trane.
Lehigh's researchers plan to test their remediation method this year
at
other contaminated groundwater sites, and are exploring the use
of
nanoparticles to neutralize explosives and treat nuclear waste
sites.
Nanotechnology Fact Sheet
-- Scientists say much of the nation's
groundwater is already contaminated.
Over the next 30 years, the U.S.
government alone estimates it will spend
$750 billion to clean up
contaminated groundwater, or about $8,000 per
American family.
-- The
traditional "pump and treat" clean-up method requires hydraulic pumps
to
bring the groundwater to the surface. The contaminated water then needs
to be
treated in a treatment vessel to meet federal drinking water
standards. Only
at this point can the water be discharged.
-- Nanoparticle technology treats
water "in situ," or right in the ground.
The nanoparticles are injected into
the ground and they race around
cleansing the contaminated water.
-- At
the Trane Co. manufacturing site in Trenton, N.J., water samples were
taken
from wells 12 hours after the nanoparticles were injected, and 96
percent of
the chemical pollution was reduced to harmless gases. Prior to
that, the most
effective method produced only a 25- percent reduction.
-- Zhang and Dan
Elliott, a Ph.D. candidate who left his job as a promising
industrial
engineer to work with Zhang on the breakthrough technology,
published the
results of their Trenton site tests in November 2001 in the
journal
Environmental Science and Technology. Their work was also featured
in the
Dec. 17, 2001, issue of Chemical and Engineering News.
-- The Lehigh
scientists are searching for funding to scale up their
nanoparticle
production, as they cannot produce them fast enough for the
tests they want
to do.
-- Nanoparticle technology could work to counter terrorist attempts
to
contaminate drinking water supplies, as the particles can reduce
biological
and chemical agents quickly. For example, researchers have found
that
nanoparticles can detoxify cyanide.
-- The tiny particles could be
useful in cleaning up nuclear waste, as
larger particles have already been
found effective in treating uranium.
Nanoparticles also are effective in
neutralizing organic solvents, which
make up the contamination in half the
nation's Superfund sites.
SOURCE: Lehigh
University
-0-
03/13/2002
/CONTACT: Tracey Moran,
610-758-4573; William Johnson, 610-758-3172/
/Web Site: http://www.lehigh.edu /