作者
Michael F Hochella Jr, David W Mogk, James Ranville, Irving C Allen, George W Luther, Linsey C Marr, B Peter McGrail, Mitsu Murayama, Nikolla P Qafoku, Kevin M Rosso, Nita Sahai, Paul A Schroeder, Peter Vikesland, Paul Westerhoff, Yi Yang
发表日期
2019/3/29
来源
Science
卷号
363
期号
6434
页码范围
eaau8299
出版商
American Association for the Advancement of Science
简介
BACKGROUND
Natural nanomaterials have always been abundant during Earth’s formation and throughout its evolution over the past 4.54 billion years. Incidental nanomaterials, which arise as a by-product from human activity, have become unintentionally abundant since the beginning of the Industrial Revolution. Nanomaterials can also be engineered to have unusual, tunable properties that can be used to improve products in applications from human health to electronics, and in energy, water, and food production. Engineered nanomaterials are very much a recent phenomenon, not yet a century old, and are just a small mass fraction of the natural and incidental varieties. As with natural and incidental nanomaterials, engineered nanomaterials can have both positive and negative consequences in our environment.
Despite the ubiquity of nanomaterials on Earth, only in the past 20 years or so have their …
引用总数