Suitability of analytical methods to measure solubility for the purpose of nanoregulation

Autor/a

Tantra, Ratna

Bouwmeester, Hans

Bolea, Eduardo

Rey-Castro, Carlos

David, Calin

Dogné, Jean Michel

Jarman, John

Laborda, Francisco

Laloy, Julie

Robinson, Kenneth N.

Undas, Anna K.

Van der Zande, Meike

Data de publicació

2016

Resum

Solubility is an important physicochemical parameter in nanoregulation. If nanomaterial is completely soluble, then from a risk assessment point of view, its disposal can be treated much in the same way as “ordinary” chemicals, which will simplify testing and characterisation regimes. This review assesses potential techniques for the measurement of nanomaterial solubility and evaluates the performance against a set of analytical criteria (based on satisfying the requirements as governed by the cosmetic regulation as well as the need to quantify the concentration of free (hydrated) ions). Our findings show that no universal method exists. A complementary approach is thus recommended, to comprise an atomic spectrometry-based method in conjunction with an electrochemical (or colorimetric) method. This article shows that although some techniques are more commonly used than others, a huge research gap remains, related with the need to ensure data reliability.


We acknowledge support from European Union Seventh Framework Programme (FP7-NMP.2012.1.3-3) under grant agreement no. 310584 (NANoREG). This work was supported by the Service Public de Wallonie (SPW) – Direction ge´ne´rale ope´rationnelle – Economie, Emploi et Recherche (DGO6), De´partement des Programmes de Recherche (NANoREG, SPW/UNamur research convention N 1317938).

Tipus de document

article
publishedVersion

Llengua

Anglès

Matèries i paraules clau

Nanomaterials; Regulation; Solubility

Publicat per

Taylor & Francis

Documents relacionats

Reproducció del document publicat a https://doi.org/10.3109/17435390.2015.1038661

Nanotoxicology, 2016, vol. 10, núm. 2, p. 173-184

info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/EC/FP7/310584

Drets

(c) Informa UK, 2015

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