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Title:
Effect of Silver Nanoparticles on Soil Denitrification Kinetics
Date:
12/2012
Link to Journal Abstract
Abstract:
The toxicity of silver nanoparticles to bacteria, while frequently demonstrated in laboratory settings, has not been well established within environmental media. This study investigates the effect of three different silver nanoparticles (35–60 nm, uncoated and coated with 0.3% polyvinylpyrrolidone) at various concentrations (1, 10, or 100 mg/L) on the microbial-facilitated soil denitrification process using native bacteria in a soil (Toccoa sandy loam) environment. The sorption of silver nanoparticles onto soil was observed through an isotherm study. It was found that silver nanoparticles exhibited much less toxicity to the denitrifying bacterial community than was expected. The toxicity was not correlated with either coatings or particle size; instead, only one type of larger silver nanoparticle (uncoated 50-nm silver particles) exhibited any toxicity, and only at a very high (100 mg/L) concentration. Toxicity was linked, however, to the silver nanoparticle affinity for soil surfaces (Kd), as determined through the isotherm study. The particle with the lowest Kd value was also the only toxic silver nanoparticle. This study is novel in its observation of silver nanoparticle toxicity to a bacterial community in a soil environment. The results of this study highlight the importance of environmental media in nanoparticle studies and the need for nanoparticle partitioning studies in terrestrial environments.
Non-technical Summary:
This study investigates the effect of three different silver nanoparticles (35–60 nm, uncoated and coated with 0.3% polyvinylpyrrolidone) at various concentrations on the microbial-facilitated soil denitrification process using native bacteria in a soil (Toccoa sandy loam) environment.
Content Emphasis
Peer Reviewed Journal Article
Exposure Or Hazard Target
Soil Ecosystem
Exposure Pathway
Other/Unspecified
Method Of Study
Environmental Study
Paper Type
Environmental Fate and Transport
Particle Type
Metal
Production Method
Engineered
Risk Exposure Group
Ecosystem
Target Audience
Technical Research
Citation:
Industrial Biotechnology, 8(6): 358-364 (December 2012)
Publication:
Industrial Biotechnology
Author:
VandeVoort AR, Arai Y
Volume:
8
Number:
6
Pages:
358-364
Last updated on January 29, 2013
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This work is supported in part by the Nanoscale Science and Engineering Initiative of the National Science Foundation
under NSF Award Number EEC-0118007.
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