Whether in the fields of medicine, sustainable energy supply or environmental
protection, without making use of nanotechnology we will not be capable of overcoming
the challenges which the future presents. In parallel with these efforts, though,
it is essential that we examine the new technology very carefully for potential
risks, such as those presented by free nanoparticles. This is the conclusion
drawn at the close of Empa's
3rd NanoConvention, held on July 6th in Zurich and attended by about 150 nano-interested
persons from the areas of research, industry, administration and the financial
sector.
 | | This year as always the NanoConvention offered participants the chance to engage in animated discussion: Paul Gilgen (Empa), Christopf Gerber (University of Basel), Stefan Fahr (Swiss MNT Network), Wolfgang Heckl (LMU Munich), Ingrid Kissling-Naef (CTI; l. to r.). |
The aim of the NanoConvention is to establish nanotechnology as a secure and
safe motor of innovation for the Swiss economy and society. "The past
has taught us that new technological developments will always find their way
out of the ivory tower and into the real world, into the hands of the man in
the street", explains Hans Hug, the head of Empa's Nanotechnology
Research Program. An early, open dialog - as broadly based as possible - on
the opportunities and risks involved is therefore necessary.
Nanoparticles in the battle against cancer
That diagnostic processes are already markedly better thanks to nanotechnology
is shown, for instance, by a blood test for colonic cancer which Gerd Grenner,
CTO of Roche Diagnostics, presented at the conference. In this method the blood
sample is tested for six different proteins, which are indicative of the disease,
in so-called microarray chips. By making use of nanoparticles, which, depending
on their size, fluoresce in different colors, the six tumor markers can be simultaneously
identified. This increases the sensitivity of the tests - that is the
fraction of subjects correctly identified as having the disease - from
about thirty per cent using a single protein to seventy per cent.
Nanotechnology is also promising in terms of therapeutic applications. Andreas
Jordan, with his company MagForce Nanotechnologies AG, has for example developed
a novel cancer treatment which allows doctors to inject magnetic nanoparticles
directly and precisely into tumors with the help of a three dimensional imaging
technique. When an oscillating magnetic field is applied, the nanoparticles
(and the tumor containing them) heat up to up to 75 degrees Celsius due to magnetic
coupling effects. This heat destroys the tumor, while at the same time the surrounding
healthy tissue is hardly damaged.
The idea of using heat to destroy tumors has been around for a long time, according
to Jordan. However, until now it has never been possible to heat the tumor selectively
without affecting the surrounding tissue. "This breakthrough will be made
possible thanks to nanotechnology", says Jordan with conviction. The results
of clinical studies on patients suffering from a glioblastoma - a particularly
malignant brain tumor - have been encouraging. According to Jordan the
average life expectancy of a patient about a year after diagnosis was "significantly
increased" and detailed results are expected to be published by the end
of the year.
Nano sandwich structures make solar cells more efficient
Besides medicinal applications, questions of energy and environment occupied
centre stage at the NanoConvention. How, for instance, do we satisfy our ever
increasing hunger for energy when crude oil reserves are exhausted? The obvious
answer: think solar. Solar cells have been converting sunlight into electric
power for years now. Christophe Ballif and his team at the «outpost»
of the EPF Lausanne at the University of Neuchâtel have been developing
solar cells based on silicon thin films. The advantages when compared to conventional
solar cells are reduced material requirement and energy consumption during the
manufacturing process.
The downside is that thin film solar cells have poorer efficiency, around ten
per cent. Ballif's aim is to increase this figure with the help of nanolayers
- ultrathin layers, just nanometers thick, of materials such as zinc oxide
which reflect and scatter the incident sunlight. This allows significantly more
light to enter the silicon layer where it is converted into electrical current.
Ballif is convinced that by employing this method it will be possible to raise
the efficiency to up 14 per cent
Results and know-how from the nano cosmos could play a role in solving the
"water paradox", as Jean-Pierre Petit of Georg Fischer AG calls
it. Clean potable water is predicted to become a rare and therefore expensive
luxury in the foreseeable future, even in industrialized countries. On the other
hand, there is more than enough water in the oceans to go around - the
question is, how to make use of it?
The answer is by using nanofiltration systems, for example. These employ filter
membranes with pore diameters of about 10 nanometers which can reliably hold
back not just bacteria but also viruses. This technology makes it possible to
transform dirty river water or even waste water into drinking water. A plant
of this kind exists in Singapore, a city-state which has no natural sources
of potable water. Membranes with even finer pores which are permeable to water
molecules but not ions are used in the reverse osmosis process. In a technique
which reverses the natural effects of osmosis, dirty water is pressurized to
overcome the concentration gradient and passes through the filter. Using this
technique it is possible to produce drinking water from sea water.
Standardized testing procedures are in demand
Despite all the optimism, the potential risks associated with the applications
of nanotechnology were not forgotten. In mid-June the German Federal Ministry
of Education and Research's «NanoCare» project drew to a successful
close. Under the leadership of Empa's Harald Krug, 16 partners from industry
and research worked to standardize risk evaluation procedures for nanomaterials
and nanoproducts. These included methods to determine the toxicity of nanoparticles
to rats with the help of cell tests and inhalation studies, and procedures to
measure the uptake of nanoparticles in body cells. "Standardized procedures
have been completely absent in the field of nanotoxicology to date. Everyone
has been testing what they wanted, however they wanted. This explains the fact
that some results are completely contradictory", maintains Krug.
The NanoCare consortium is concentrating on the 11 most frequently employed
nanomaterials such as zinc oxide (used in cosmetics), barium sulfate (used to
stabilize plastics), strontium carbonate (used in ceramic glazes) and titanium
dioxide, which is used in sun creams and many other products. Provisional results
indicate that, as far as is currently known, the tested materials represent
no cause for alarm. However, Krug, a toxicologist, does admit that chronic effects
have not yet been adequately investigated.
So the nano-researchers are not likely to run out of work any time soon. But
the feeling at the NanoConvention was unanimous in that these efforts were very
much worth while. Péter Krüger of Bayer Material Science AG hit
the nail on the head when he said "Nanotechnology is not THE solution
to the greatest problems of the future, but it is certainly one of them."
Posted July 14th, 2009
|