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Something
in the air: nanoparticles and ?
07/25/06
The world's first machine to
simultaneously measure two vital properties of airborne
nanoparticle pollution is going on an overseas trip to a leading
atmospheric chemistry laboratory in Switzerland.
Nic
Meyer (left) and Dr Zoran Ristovski with the nanoparticle
analyzer
Image
Courtesy of QUT
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The analyzer, developed by
the Queensland University of Technology's International
Laboratory for Air Quality and Health, measures the volatile and
hygroscopic (water absorbing) properties of nanoparticles emitted
from vehicles.
Airborne nanoparticles are
believed to have a role in the formation of lung and heart
disease.
Nic Meyer and Dr Zoran
Ristovski, whose visit is funded by the European Science
Foundation, will take the analyzer to the Paul Scherrer
Institute, near Zurich, where Swiss scientists have built a copy
of the QUT machine.
The two devices will be
standardized to enable future collaborative research in
conjunction with researchers from UK and Swedish universities.
Mr Meyer said the analyzer had
opened the door to important research into the structure and
behavior of nanoparticles emitted into the air from both man made
and natural sources.
"It is the first device in
the world that can provide information on two physical properties
of tiny airborne nanoparticles simultaneously," he said.
"Being able to measure
these two properties at the same time gives us a greater
probability of identifying the components which make up the
aerosols.
"The instrument can also
strip off atomic layers that make up these particles to give an
insight into their structure."
Dr Ristovski said this work
could be applied to understanding the health effects of
microscopic nanoparticles thought to lodge in the lungs after
being inhaled that do not pass out of the body as larger
particles do.
"The research shows the
smaller the particles are, the more toxic they are," Dr
Ristovski said.
"We can't say why they
cause heart and lung problems because the mechanism is not yet
completely understood. However, by determining the structure and
composition of these particles we can begin to understand the
processes involved.
"Once we can describe the
properties of nanoparticles, scientists can model their effects
on human health."
Mr Meyer's previous research
had shown that nanoparticles from diesel emissions came from
sulphuric acid, ammonia and water.
"As emission reduction
devices have become more prevalent on diesel vehicles there has
been a reduction in the black soot component of these emissions,"
he said.
"This has led to an
increase in levels of volatile nanoparticles which previously
clung to the soot emissions. Determining these particles' make-up
will help reduce these emissions and understand their health
effects."
Source
/ Credit: Queensland University of Technology
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