Nanoparticles for Mitigation of Harmful Cyanobacterial Blooms.
Ilana N TseytlinAnna K AntrimPing GongPublished in: Toxins (2024)
With the rapid advancement of nanotechnology and its widespread applications, increasing amounts of manufactured and natural nanoparticles (NPs) have been tested for their potential utilization in treating harmful cyanobacterial blooms (HCBs). NPs can be used as a photocatalyst, algaecide, adsorbent, flocculant, or coagulant. The primary mechanisms explored for NPs to mitigate HCBs include photocatalysis, metal ion-induced cytotoxicity, physical disruption of the cell membrane, light-shielding, flocculation/coagulation/sedimentation of cyanobacterial cells, and the removal of phosphorus (P) and cyanotoxins from bloom water by adsorption. As an emerging and promising chemical/physical approach for HCB mitigation, versatile NP-based technologies offer great advantages, such as being environmentally benign, cost-effective, highly efficient, recyclable, and adaptable. The challenges we face include cost reduction, scalability, and impacts on non-target species co-inhabiting in the same environment. Further efforts are required to scale up to real-world operations through developing more efficient, recoverable, reusable, and deployable NP-based lattices or materials that are adaptable to bloom events in different water bodies of different sizes, such as reservoirs, lakes, rivers, and marine environments.
Keyphrases
- highly efficient
- climate change
- physical activity
- induced apoptosis
- mental health
- oxide nanoparticles
- aqueous solution
- cell cycle arrest
- visible light
- high glucose
- diabetic rats
- oxidative stress
- cell death
- walled carbon nanotubes
- quality improvement
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- drug induced
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- sewage sludge
- risk assessment
- mass spectrometry
- high resolution
- genetic diversity
- simultaneous determination
- liquid chromatography