| Literature DB >> 26903124 |
D Kühnel1, C Marquardt2, K Nau2, H F Krug3, F Paul4, C Steinbach4.
Abstract
The use of nanotechnology and advanced materials promises to revolutionise many areas of technology and improve our daily life. In that respect, many positive effects on the environment are expected, either directly, by developing new technologies for remediation, filtering techniques or energy generation, or indirectly, by e.g. saving resources due to lower consumption of raw materials, or lower energy and fuel consumption due to reduced weight of vehicles. However, such beneficial effects of new technologies are often confronted by concerns regarding the safety of novel substances or materials. During the past 10 years, great effort has been put into research on potential hazards of nanomaterials towards environmental organisms. As the methodology for reliable assessment of nanomaterials was immature, many studies reporting contradictory results have been published, hindering both risk assessment for nanomaterials, as well as the knowledge communication to all involved stakeholders. Thus, DaNa2.0 serves as a platform to implement trusted knowledge on nanomaterials for an objective discussion.Entities:
Keywords: Environmental impact; Knowledge base; Knowledge dissemination; Nano ecotoxicity; Nanomaterials; Nanoobjects; Science communication
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26903124 PMCID: PMC5393291 DOI: 10.1007/s11356-016-6217-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Sci Pollut Res Int ISSN: 0944-1344 Impact factor: 4.223
Fig. 1Overview on groups of nanomaterials contained in the DaNa2.0 knowledge base and examples with environmental relevance
Fig. 2Access to information on nanomaterial safety according to application. By choosing ‘fertiliser’ in the application column, the material column highlights ‘zeolite’. Upon choosing zeolite, the information column provides access to in-brief information on material properties, exposure of man and environment, as well as uptake and behaviour (not available in this example). From there, more in-depth information is accessible. Moreover, the application column highlights now additional uses of this nanomaterial. (http://www.nanopartikel.info/en/nanoinfo/knowledge-base#anwendung=anwendung/60&material=material/28, Dec. 2015)
Graded levels of complexity realised in the DaNa2.0 knowledge base to address different backgrounds of our visitors
| Level of complexity | Content | Anticipated recipient |
|---|---|---|
| One pager | Short and basic summary, covering the most striking information for each nanomaterial | Interested citizens/consumers (public-oriented) |
| Short summary | Subdivided into sections with regard to material information, exposure, uptake and behaviour of a specific nanomaterial | Interested citizens/consumers (public-oriented) |
| Detailed article | In-depth information for each section and nanomaterial | Journalists, stakeholders, scientists from other fields, regulators |
| Original references | List of the literature used to compile the detailed articles | Scientists from related fields, regulators |
Fig. 3Access statistics for the DaNa2.0 website. In the upper panel, the number of visitors and the respective page view for the years 2014 and 2015 are depicted. The lower panel shows the distribution of visitors according to countries of origin