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Research on Nanomaterials

Manufactured nanomaterials are in more than 1,300 commercial products including medical equipment, textiles, fuel additives, cosmetics, plastics and more. EPA scientists research the most prevalent nanomaterials that may have human and environmental health implications. The research is  developing a scientific foundation to better understand, predict and manage the challenges of nanomaterials.

  • Why is EPA studying nanomaterials?
  • What are the unique characteristics of nanomaterials?
  • What nanomaterials is EPA studying?
  • How will EPA use this research?

EPA develops scientific methods to study and evaluate the unique properties of nanomaterials, how they behave during manufacturing, product use, and end of life disposal. To better protect human health and the environment, EPA and others use the research to inform policy and regulatory decisions about chemicals.

Learn about our work to control nanoscale materials under the Toxic Substances Control Act

Nanomaterials Research

Mapping environmental fate of nanomaterials

The environmental fate of chemicals describes the processes by which chemicals move and change in the environment. Due to the uncertainty about the unique characteristics of nanomaterials and their potential uses and effects, it is important to map the environmental fate of nanomaterials. EPA is developing information to describe the relationships between key properties of nanomaterials and their

  • environmental fate,
  • transport,
  • transformation,
  • bio-distribution,
  • exposure, and
  • toxicity to humans and other species.
  • Estimating Nanomaterial Transport in Soils
  • Innovative Nanomaterial Characterization Techniques
  • Case Study: The Impact of Silver Nanoparticles on Municipal Solid Waste

Nanomaterial Effects on Ecosystems and Wildlife Health 

Nanomaterials have become widely used in products ranging from clothing (which incorporates bacteria-fighting nano Silver) to sunscreen. Nanomaterials are very useful, but there is insufficient information about how nanomaterials affect ecosystem health.

Since nanomaterials are much smaller than normal (about 100,000 times smaller than the width of a human hair), they are absorbed more easily by animal's lungs and skin. EPA is in the process of researching how nanomaterials interact with biological processes important to the health of ecosystems and wildlife species that live in these ecosystems.

  • Studying Nanomaterials in Ecosystems and the Environment
  • Using New Chemical Data to Classify Nanomaterials

Developing Sustainable Nanomaterials

EPA scientists are researching more sustainable ways to produce and apply nonmaterials, in order to minimize their potential environmental and human health impacts.

  • Green production of nanomaterials to promote sustainable nanotechnologies
  • Nano-encapsulated Membranes

Collaborative Research on Nanomaterials

Publications

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