Kim Bojeong, Murayama Mitsuhiro, Colman Benjamin P, Hochella Michael F
The Center for NanoBioEarth, Department of Geosciences, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA 24061, USA.
J Environ Monit. 2012 Apr;14(4):1129-37. doi: 10.1039/c2em10809g. Epub 2012 Feb 20.
Titanium dioxide (TiO(2)) is the most extensively used engineered nanoparticle to date, yet its fate in the soil environment has been investigated only rarely and is poorly understood. In the present study, we conducted two field-scale investigations to better describe TiO(2) nano- and larger particles in their most likely route of entry into the environment, i.e., the application of biosolids to soils. We particularly concentrated on the particles in the nano-size regime due to their novel and commercially useful properties. First, we analyzed three sewage sludge products from the US EPA TNSSS sampling inventory for the occurrence, qualitative abundance, and nature of TiO(2) nano- and larger particles by using analytical scanning electron microscopy and analytical (scanning) transmission electron microscopy. Nano- and larger particles of TiO(2) were repeatedly identified across the sewage sludge types tested, providing strong evidence of their likely concentration in sewage sludge products. The TiO(2) particles identified were as small as 40 nm, and as large as 300 nm, having faceted shapes with the rutile crystal structure, and they typically formed small, loosely packed aggregates. Second, we examined surface soils in mesocosms that had been amended with Ag nanoparticle-spiked biosolids for the occurrence of TiO(2) particles. An aggregate of TiO(2) nanoparticles with the rutile structure was again identified, but this time TiO(2) nanoparticles were found to contain Ag on their surfaces. This suggests that TiO(2) nanoparticles from biosolids can interact with toxic trace metals that would then enter the environment as a soil amendment. Therefore, the long-term behavior of TiO(2) nano- and larger particles in sewage sludge materials as well as their impacts in the soil environment need to be carefully considered.
二氧化钛(TiO₂)是迄今为止使用最广泛的工程纳米颗粒,然而其在土壤环境中的归宿却鲜有研究,人们对此了解甚少。在本研究中,我们进行了两项田间规模的调查,以更好地描述TiO₂纳米颗粒和较大颗粒进入环境的最可能途径,即向土壤中施用生物固体。由于其新颖且具有商业用途的特性,我们特别关注纳米尺寸范围内的颗粒。首先,我们通过分析扫描电子显微镜和分析(扫描)透射电子显微镜,对美国环境保护局TNSSS采样清单中的三种污水污泥产品进行分析,以确定TiO₂纳米颗粒和较大颗粒的存在情况、定性丰度和性质。在测试的各种污水污泥类型中,反复鉴定出TiO₂纳米颗粒和较大颗粒,有力地证明了它们可能在污水污泥产品中富集。鉴定出的TiO₂颗粒小至40纳米,大至300纳米,具有金红石晶体结构的多面形状,并且通常形成小的、松散堆积的聚集体。其次,我们检查了用掺有银纳米颗粒的生物固体改良的中宇宙中的表层土壤,以确定TiO₂颗粒的存在情况。再次鉴定出具有金红石结构的TiO₂纳米颗粒聚集体,但这次发现TiO₂纳米颗粒表面含有银。这表明来自生物固体的TiO₂纳米颗粒可以与有毒微量金属相互作用,然后作为土壤改良剂进入环境。因此,需要仔细考虑TiO₂纳米颗粒和较大颗粒在污水污泥材料中的长期行为及其对土壤环境的影响。