| Literature DB >> 34072155 |
Lishi Zhong1, Lili Zhang1, Yimeng Li1, Xue Liang2, Lu Kong1, Xiaobing Shen1, Tianshu Wu1.
Abstract
Along with the rapid development of nanotechnology, the biosafety of quantum dots (QDs), a widely used kind of nanoparticles, has grabbed the attentions of researchers, because QDs have excellent and unique optical properties that other commonly used nanoparticles, like walled carbon nanotubes, do not have. The understanding of the toxicity of QDs is an important premise for their application in wider fields, including biology and medicine. This study sought to analyze scientific publications on the toxicity of QDs and to construct a bibliometric model for qualitative and quantitative evaluation of these publications over the past decade, which visually presented the status quo and future development trend on the toxicological study of QDs. A search for data using the triple blind method revealed that, as of 31 December 2018, there were 5269 papers published on the toxicity of QDs. RSC ADVANCES (5-year IF, 3.096) ranked first in the number of publications. China had the largest number of publications (2233) and the highest H-index (119), but the United States was still the leading country with regards to the quality of the research. LIU Y (106 publications) published the most papers, while Hardman R (304 co-citations) had the most co-citations. The keyword "walled carbon nanotube" ranked first in the research frontier. The findings not only determine a development trend of the toxicological study of QDs, but also identify further research directions in this field.Entities:
Keywords: bibliometrics; nanotoxicology; quantum dot; toxicity
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34072155 PMCID: PMC8199113 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18115768
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1The process of retrieval and exclusion.
Figure 2Publication outputs and growth prediction. (a) The number of annual publications on QDs toxicity research from 2009 to 2018; (b) The model-fitting curve of the growth trend of publications on QDs toxicity.
The top 10 journals that published articles on QDs toxicity research.
| Rank | Journal Title | Country | Count | Percent | 5-Year IF |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | RSC Advances | England | 237 | 4.37% | 3.096 |
| 2 | Nanoscale | England | 178 | 3.29% | 7.713 |
| 3 | ACS Applied Materials Interfaces | United States | 129 | 2.38% | 8.284 |
| 4 | Biomaterials | England | 126 | 2.33% | 9.315 |
| 5 | Journal of Materials Chemistry B | England | 107 | 1.98% | 4.959 |
| 6 | ACS Nano | United States | 96 | 1.77% | 14.82 |
| 7 | Scientific Reports | England | 84 | 0.016 | 4.609 |
| 8 | Nanotechnology | England | 83 | 1.53% | 3.467 |
| 9 | Journal of Nanoscience and Nanotechnology | United States | 79 | 1.46% | 1.103 |
| 10 | Sensors and Actuators B Chemical | Switzerland | 73 | 1.35% | 5.118 |
Figure 3The analysis of countries/territories and institutions. (a) Network map of countries/territories engaged in QDs toxicity research; (b) Network map of institutions engaged in QDs toxicity research.
The top 10 countries and institutions that contributed to publications on QDs toxicity research.
| Rank | Country | Count | Institution | Count |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Peoples Republic of China | 2233 | Chinese Acad Sci | 368 |
| 2 | USA | 1067 | Jilin Univ | 125 |
| 3 | India | 603 | Soochow Univ | 103 |
| 4 | South Korea | 349 | Univ Chinese Acad Sci | 90 |
| 5 | Germany | 188 | Wuhan Univ | 89 |
| 6 | Italy | 183 | Fudan Univ | 83 |
| 7 | England | 177 | Shanghai Jiao Tong Univ | 83 |
| 8 | Canada | 172 | Nanyang Technol Univ | 75 |
| 9 | Japan | 162 | Southeast Univ | 68 |
| 10 | France | 161 | Univ Sci Technol China | 63 |
Figure 4The number of publications, citations, and H-indexes on QDs toxicity research of the top 10 countries/territories.
Figure 5Analysis of the authors. (a) Network map of active authors who contributed to QDs toxicity research; (b) Network map of co-cited authors that contributed to QDs toxicity research.
The top 10 authors, co-cited authors, and co-cited references in QDs toxicity research.
| Rank | Author | Count | Co-Cited Author | Count | Co-Cited Reference | Count |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Liu Y | 106 | Derfus AM | 593 | Hardman R, 2006, Environ Health Persp, V114, P165 | 304 |
| 2 | Wang J | 66 | Michalet X | 492 | Michalet X, 2005, Science, V307, P538 | 292 |
| 3 | Zhang Y | 61 | Gao XH | 432 | Derfus AM, 2004, Nano Lett, V4, P11 | 266 |
| 4 | Wang Y | 56 | Chan WCW | 410 | Baker SN, 2010, Angew Chem Int Edit, V49, P6726 | 222 |
| 5 | Li Y | 48 | Medintz IL | 388 | Choi HS, 2007, Nat Biotechnol, V25, P1165 | 206 |
| 6 | Yong KT | 46 | Hardman R | 379 | Kirchner C, 2005, Nano Lett, V5, P331 | 199 |
| 7 | Zhang J | 43 | Zhang Y | 294 | Gao XH, 2004, Nat Biotechnol, V22, P969 | 190 |
| 8 | Wang X | 38 | Choi HS | 286 | Medintz IL, 2005, Nat Mater, V4, P435 | 177 |
| 9 | Yang B | 38 | Wang Y | 277 | NEL A, 2006, Science, V311, P622 | 173 |
| 10 | Zhang H | 36 | Bruchez M | 274 | Cho SJ, 2007, Langmuir, V23, P1974 | 170 |
Figure 6The analysis of references. (a) Co-citation map of references from publications on QDs toxicity research; (b) Co-citation map (timeline view) of references from publications on QDs toxicity research.
Figure 7The keywords with the strongest citation bursts of publications on QDs toxicity research. The time intervals are plotted on the blue line, while the periods of burst keywords are plotted on the red line, indicating the beginning and end of the time interval of each burst.