
Environmental applications of nanotechnology

Environmental applications of nanotechnology
By the AVICENN team – Last modification August 2022
The “promises” of nanotechnology for the environment
Nanotechnologies are often presented as a miracle solution to many environmental problems. In 2009, theUnion of Chemical Industries (UIC) stated that “nanomaterials help reduce the environmental footprint of activities: low-energy tires, less energy-consuming vehicles, better insulated homes, more autonomous and less energy-consuming cell phones and computers. (…) Nanotechnologies are increasingly involved in soil and water decontamination, CO2 storage, and the production and storage of renewable energy. At the industrial level, they allow the production of manufactured products while consuming less energy and raw materials“1Actor’s notebook for the national public debate, Union des Industries Chimiques (UIC), Oct. 2009.
As reported by the President of the National Commission for the National Public Debate on Nanotechnology in April 2010, this discourse is maintained by French research institutions: “What is expected to be positive from nanotechnology? According to the CNRS and the CEA, one of the objectives is to contribute to the development of a society that is economical with natural resources and energy, and that has a strong requirement for the preservation of health and the environment.2Bilan du débat public sur le développement et la régulation des nanotechnologies, CNDP, April 2010.
Through our web monitoring, we will also spot numerous announcements of development of so-called “green” nano-applications.3See the bibliography below, heading “elsewhere on the web”.
Vigilance is nevertheless required: in addition to the fact that there are many uncertainties about the risks associated with these developments (see below), some people question the reality and the environmental footprint of these promises:
What is the effectiveness of the benefits and what is the ecological balance?
In March 2022, in the magazine La Recherche, Natacha Krins, lecturer at the Laboratoire de Chimie de la Matière Condensée de Paris(LCMCP), shared her questions about the applications of nanomaterials for energy (in batteries in particular): “We don’t always have a global vision of the issues, we work on subjects that are extremely specialized but very small compared to the scale of the problem” (climate disruption). For example in terms of the origin of raw materials, recycling, or even the energy management strategy to integrate with.”4Cf. Ecological transition in research: greener chemistry for a sustainable world, La Recherche, 28 March 2022.
These thoughts are in line with those expressed for a long time by many environmental associations, including the NGOs grouped within the European Environmental Bureau (BEE) and the International Network for the Elimination of Persistent Organic Pollutants (IPEN), who warned early on that the benefits attributed to nanotechnology are often exaggerated, untested and, in many cases, years away from being realized5 Nanotechnology and the environment: a gap between rhetoric and reality European Environmental Bureau (EEB) and the International Persistent Organic Pollutants Elimination Network (IPEN), 2009; Nanomaterials: Health and Environmental Concerns, EEB, 2009.
Nanotechnologies allow to obtain a better efficiency with less quantities of products? That’s forgetting the increase in demographics and consumption volumes. Friends of the Earth International even fears that nanotechnology will actually increase energy consumption and costs6
Nanotechnology, climate and energy: over-heated promises and hot air?
Friends of the Earth, November 2010 (see here for a summary in French: Nanotechnologies, climat et énergie).
With the EEB andIPEN Nanotechnology7and the Environment: a gap between rhetoric and reality, European Environmental Bureau (EEB) and the International Persistent Organic Pollutants Elimination Network (IPEN), 2009; Nanomaterials: Health and Environmental Concerns, EEB, 2009,They also point out that the environmental promises associated with nanotechnology often relate only to theuse or operation of the products with which they are associated and ignore the environmental footprint of the other stages of the product life cycle – development, manufacture, use, recycling or disposal – where the environment may be damaged.
For example, the research, extraction of raw materials, manufacturing and end-of-life treatment of certain nanomaterials require more sophisticated installations and equipment than traditional processes, and also more energy, more additives (especially water) and sometimes more solvents that are harmful to the environment8In a long-term operating scenario, the life cycle assessment of two solar water purification processes, for example, showed a significantly higher environmental impact for the nano-TiO2-based photocatalytic process compared to the conventional approach, due to the high resource consumption in the production of nanoscale titanium dioxide (Untersuchungen des Einsatzes von Nanomaterialien im Umweltschutz, Martens, Sonja, et al (Golder Associates Gmbh), 2010, solicited by: Umweltbundesamt, no. 34/2010, June 2010, Dessau-Roßlau: Umweltbundesamt).
Greenhouse gas emissions generated by the production of certain nanomaterials, nano-silver in particular, may also be more significantProspective9environmental life cycle of nanosilver Tshirts, Walser Tobias et al, ES&T, 2011, 45(10): 4570-4578They are responsible for global warming and the depletion of the ozone layer.
Moreover, even during the phase of their use, some products have a low production efficiency, due to a high energy cost for a limited life span (especially all electronic gadgets, smartphones in the first line, using micro and nano-electronics which hardly exceed a few years).
The high-tech production of carbon-based nanomaterials, such as fullerenes, carbon nanotubes and carbon nanofibers, is currently extremely energy-intensive.10See for example The Potential for Nanotechnology in the Aerospace Industry, Mouser, May 2022The fuel savings associated with weight reduction are far from offsetting the energy costs associated with their production. The life cycle impact of carbon nanofibers could be one hundred times greater than that of the materials they are used in place of (aluminum, steel or polypropylene) in the aeronautics or automotive industries, for example11See for example:
– Minimum Energy Requirements for the Manufacturing of Carbon Nanotubes, Gutowski, Timothy G., et al. 2010, IEEE, International Symposium on Sustainable Systems and Technologies,May 16-19, 2010, Washington D.C.
– Carbon Nanofiber Polymer Composites: Evaluation of Life Cycle Energy Use, Khanna, Vikas/Bakshi, Bhavik R., 2009, Environmental Science & Technology, 43(6), 2078-2084.
– Material and Energy Intensity of Fullerene Production, Anctil, Annick, et al. 2011, Environmental Science & Technology, 45(6), 2353-2359..
The energy bill obviously depends on the quantities of nanomaterials produced: when very small quantities are used, for example in the case of carbon nanotubes to produce special plastic films, there can be an energy saving12Entlastungseffekte für die Umwelt durch nanotechnische Verfahren und Produkte, Steinfeldt, Michael/Von Gleich, Arnim (Institut für ökologische Wirtschaftsforschung gGmbH FB Umweltökonomie und -politik), 2010, solicited by Umweltbundesamt, no. 33/210, June 2010, Dessau-Roßlau: Umweltbundesamt. But the other question that emerges concerns the risks that nanomaterials may pose.
– In French :
- At the border between seas and rivers springs blue energy, CNRS, September 2022
- U.S. CNM cloud seeding nanomaterials tests show promising results, Emirates News Agency (WAM), August 15, 2021
- Nanomaterials to decontaminate water, INRS Canada, August 2, 2021
- Nanomaterials and their environmental applications – Photovoltaic and Photocatalytic applications, Hajjaji A, European University Publishing, May 2021
- Nanotechnologies and nanomaterials for energy, Pierre-Camille Lacaze, Jean-Christophe Lacroix, Iste Energie, 23 April 2021
- Nanomaterials enable reversible heating and cooling device, Enerzine, December 9, 2020
- The super powers of nano-materials, Transition and Energy, January 28, 2020
- Nanotechnology, too, can go green, Engineering Techniques, October 10, 2018
- Better solar dihydrogen production with nickel nanoparticles, CNRS, August 1, 2018
- Solar panels: more efficient photovoltaic cells thanks to reverberant nanoparticles doped with organic dyes, Futura Sciences, April 27, 2018
- Cheaper, less toxic and recyclable light sensors for hydrogen production, CNRS, April 10, 2018
- Nanowire research could herald a new generation of wearable solar devices, Cordis, February 21, 2018
- Changing materials will reduce greenhouse gas emissions, Anatoly Chubais (Rusnano), Les Echos, December 2015
- How do nanotechnologies contribute to the energy transition?, NanoResp Forum, November 2015
- Novel nanomaterials in sustainable energy, Munteanu LI et al, IPOC, April 2014.
- In English:
- The Potential for Nanotechnology in the Aerospace Industry, Mouser, May 2022
- NanoMATEN – NanoMaterials for Energy and Environment 2022
- Nanomaterials Hold Promise for Producing Hydrogen from Water, University of Houston, March 21, 2018
- Nanomaterials for Environmental Protection, Kharisov BI et al, John Wiley & Sons, August 2014
- the synthesis made by : Energy & Environment – Nanosciences at the heart of clean technologies, Electronic Bulletins, December 2011
- Nanotechnology and the environment – Potential benefits and sustainability effects, Institute of Technology Assessment of the Austrian Academy of Sciences, 2012
A comment, a question? This sheet realized by AVICENN is intended to be completed and updated. Please feel free to contribute.
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File initially created in September 2012
Notes & références
- 1Actor’s notebook for the national public debate, Union des Industries Chimiques (UIC), Oct. 2009
- 2
- 3See the bibliography below, heading “elsewhere on the web”
- 4Cf. Ecological transition in research: greener chemistry for a sustainable world, La Recherche, 28 March 2022
- 5
- 6Nanotechnology, climate and energy: over-heated promises and hot air? Friends of the Earth, November 2010 (see here for a summary in French: Nanotechnologies, climat et énergie)
- 7
- 8In a long-term operating scenario, the life cycle assessment of two solar water purification processes, for example, showed a significantly higher environmental impact for the nano-TiO2-based photocatalytic process compared to the conventional approach, due to the high resource consumption in the production of nanoscale titanium dioxide (Untersuchungen des Einsatzes von Nanomaterialien im Umweltschutz, Martens, Sonja, et al (Golder Associates Gmbh), 2010, solicited by: Umweltbundesamt, no. 34/2010, June 2010, Dessau-Roßlau: Umweltbundesamt)
- 9environmental life cycle of nanosilver Tshirts, Walser Tobias et al, ES&T, 2011, 45(10): 4570-4578
- 10See for example The Potential for Nanotechnology in the Aerospace Industry, Mouser, May 2022
- 11See for example:
– Minimum Energy Requirements for the Manufacturing of Carbon Nanotubes, Gutowski, Timothy G., et al. 2010, IEEE, International Symposium on Sustainable Systems and Technologies,May 16-19, 2010, Washington D.C.
– Carbon Nanofiber Polymer Composites: Evaluation of Life Cycle Energy Use, Khanna, Vikas/Bakshi, Bhavik R., 2009, Environmental Science & Technology, 43(6), 2078-2084.
– Material and Energy Intensity of Fullerene Production, Anctil, Annick, et al. 2011, Environmental Science & Technology, 45(6), 2353-2359. - 12Entlastungseffekte für die Umwelt durch nanotechnische Verfahren und Produkte, Steinfeldt, Michael/Von Gleich, Arnim (Institut für ökologische Wirtschaftsforschung gGmbH FB Umweltökonomie und -politik), 2010, solicited by Umweltbundesamt, no. 33/210, June 2010, Dessau-Roßlau: Umweltbundesamt