Authors: André J Lecloux
Publish Date: 2015/11/21
Volume: 17, Issue: 11, Pages: 447-
Abstract
In the EU regulation a material containing particles is considered as nano if for 50 or more of the particles in the number size distribution one or more external dimensions is in the size range 1–100 nm Due to the difficulty to measure in a reliable way the number particle size distribution it is suggested to use the volumespecific surface area VSSA 60 m2/cm3 as simple screening criterion to identify nanomaterials This threshold corresponds to monodispersed spherical particles with a size of 100 nm In this paper a theoretical study is carried out to identify the effect of the particle shape polydispersity agglomeration and aggregation on the VSSA threshold It appears that the VSSA approach is overprotective because a lot of samples are identified as nanomaterials even if less than 50 of the particles have a size lower than 100 nm this 50 in number criterion being the main identification criterion in the EU definition Even if the VSSA is leading to many false positive results it can be used to identify nonnanomaterials as soon as its value is lower than the threshold at the condition to take into account the shape of the particles and their external surface area This conclusion is true for monomodal distributions of particles but is subject to some restrictions for bimodal distributionsThe research leading to these results has been supported by the European Union Seventh Framework Programme FP7/2007–2013 under the project NANoREG a common European approach to the regulatory testing of nanomaterials Grant Agreement 310584 The author would like to thank Tom van Teunenbroek Aart Dijkzeul and Keld Alstrup Jensen for their encouragements and their interest This publication reflects only the author’s views and the community is not liable for any use that may be made of the information contained therein
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