Nanoparticles and Occupational Health - Andrew D Maynard - Libros - Springer - 9789048174614 - 19 de octubre de 2010
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Nanoparticles and Occupational Health 1st Ed. Softcover of Orig. Ed. 2007 edition

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Jacket Description/Back: Nanotechnology is rapidly invading many aspects of modern society - from science, research and engineering to industrial and commercial applications and, inevitably, to man and his environment. One of the biggest challenges, therefore, is managing environmental, health and safety risks of nanomaterials. Yet, the information necessary to assess their longterm effects is scarce. Systematic research into what potentially makes engineered nanomaterials hazardous, how this translates into risk, and how these can be managed will be vital and involves interdisciplinary collaboration. The first International Symposium on Nanotechnology and Occupational Health, in 2004, brought together hygienists, manufacturers, toxicologists, materials scientists, regulators and researchers. It pointed the way to what needs to be done. The second International Symposium, 2005, Minneapolis, Minnesota, demonstrated the power and potential where there is a will: with nearly three times as many attendants, and with contributions from academics, industry, policymakers, non-government organizations and even lawyers, this second symposum established that, while there is international concern over how to ensure safe nanotech-workplaces, there is also progress being made in developing the required knowledge. This volume, a reprint from a special issue of the Journal of Nanoparticle Research, mainly draws from work presented at the 2005 symposium, diverse but united by the need for a holistic view of nanotechnology and risk. Audience: Libraries, laboratories, scientists and researchers, policymakers, international associations and initiatives involved in nanotechnology. Table of Contents: Editorial Maynard, A. D. and Pui, D. Y. H.: Nanotechnology and Occupational Health Perspectives Keller, K.: Nanotechnology and Society Balbus, J.: Health policy and regulatory frameworks Papers Wallace, W.: Phospholipid lung surfactant and NP surface toxicity: lessons from diesel shoots and silicate dusts Kortshagen, U.: Plasma synthesis of semiconductor nanocrystals for electronics and luminescence applications Maynard A.: Size-differentiated physicochemical characterization of airborne single walled carbon nanotube Fissan, H.: Rationale and principle of an instrument measuring lung deposition surface area Pui D. Y. H.: Calibration and Numerical Simulation of the Nanoparticle Surface Area Monitor (TSI Model 3550 NSAM) Tsai, Chuen-Jinn: An axial flow cyclone to remove nanoparticles at low pressure conditions Japuntich, D.: A comparison of two nano-sized particle air filtration tests in the diameter range of 10 to 400 nm Wang, Jing: Modeling of filtration efficiency of nanoparticles in standard filter media Kim, Seong Chan: Experimental study of nanoparticles penetration through commercial filter media Biswas, Pratim: Reduction of exposure to welding process generated nanoparticles by ventillation changes in an occupational environment Kandlikar, M., Ramachandran, G., Maynard, A. D., Murdock, B. and Toscano, W. A.: Health risk assessment for nanoparticles: A case for using expert judgment Chein, Hung-Min: Evaluation of Nanoparticle Emission for TiO2 Nanopowder Coating Materials Kuzma, J.: The Nanotechnology-Biology Interface: Exploring Models for Oversight ReportsPublisher Marketing: Nanotechnology is rapidly invading many aspects of modern society - from science, research and engineering to industrial and commercial applications and, inevitably, to man and his environment. One of the biggest challenges, therefore, is managing environmental, health and safety risks of nanomaterials. Yet, the information necessary to assess their long term effects is scarce. Systematic research into what potentially makes engineered nanomaterials hazardous, how this translates into risk, and how these can be managed will be vital and involves interdisciplinary collaboration. The first International Symposium on Nanotechnology and Occupational Health, in 2004, brought together hygienists, manufacturers, toxicologists, materials scientists, regulators and researchers. It pointed the way to what needs to be done. The second International Symposium, 2005, Minneapolis, Minnesota, demonstrated the power and potential where there is a will: with nearly three times as many attendants, and with contributions from academics, industry, policymakers, non-government organizations and even lawyers, this second symposium established that, while there is international concern over how to ensure safe nanotech-workplaces, there is also progress being made in developing the required knowledge. This volume, a reprint from a special issue of the Journal of Nanoparticle Research, mainly draws from work presented at the 2005 symposium, diverse but united by the need for a holistic view of nanotechnology and risk.


185 pages, biography

Medios de comunicación Libros     Paperback Book   (Libro con tapa blanda y lomo encolado)
Publicado 19 de octubre de 2010
ISBN13 9789048174614
Editores Springer
Páginas 185
Dimensiones 195 × 260 × 10 mm   ·   444 g
Editor Maynard, Andrew D.
Editor Pui, David Y.h

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