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Airborne emissions from combustion of graphene nanoplatelet/epoxy composites and their cytotoxicity on lung cells via air-liquid interface cell exposure in vitro
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Metadata
Document Title
Airborne emissions from combustion of graphene nanoplatelet/epoxy composites and their cytotoxicity on lung cells via air-liquid interface cell exposure in vitro
Author
Netkueakul W, Chortarea S, Kulthong K, Li H, Qiu GY, Jovic M, Gaan S, Hannig Y, Buerki-Thurnherr T, Wick P, Wang J
Name from Authors Collection
Affiliations
Swiss Federal Institutes of Technology Domain; ETH Zurich; Swiss Federal Institutes of Technology Domain; Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science & Technology (EMPA); Swiss Federal Institutes of Technology Domain; Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science & Technology (EMPA); National Science & Technology Development Agency - Thailand; National Nanotechnology Center (NANOTEC); Swiss Federal Institutes of Technology Domain; Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science & Technology (EMPA); Swiss Federal Institutes of Technology Domain; Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science & Technology (EMPA)
Type
Article
Source Title
NANOIMPACT
Year
2022
Volume
27
Open Access
hybrid, Green Published
Publisher
ELSEVIER
DOI
10.1016/j.impact.2022.100414
Format
Abstract
Graphene nanoplatelet (GNP) as a nanofiller improves the mechanical strength, electrical conductivity, and flame retardancy of the polymers significantly. With an increasing number of GNP-reinforced products, a careful safety assessment is needed to avoid social and economic setbacks. However, no study has addressed the effects of combustion-generated emissions from GNP-reinforced products in the lung, the most sensitive exposure route to airborne particles. Therefore, we studied the influence of GNP as a nanofiller on the emitted particles and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), and cytotoxicity of the emissions from the combustion of pure epoxy (EP) and GNP-reinforced epoxy (EP-GNP). GNP was not detected in the airborne emissions. PAHs were found in airborne particles of both emissions from EP and EP-GNP, with some differences in their concentrations. A first hazard assessment was performed on human alveolar epithelial cells exposed to the airborne emissions at airliquid interface conditions. At 24 h and 96 h after the exposure, similar responses were observed between EP and EP-GNP except an acute transient decrease in mitochondrial activity after exposure to the emissions from EPGNP. Both emissions from EP and EP-GNP had no acute effects on membrane integrity, cell morphology or expression of anti-oxidative stress markers (HMOX1 and SOD2 genes). Meanwhile, both emissions induced the activation of the aryl hydrocarbon receptor (CYP1A1 gene) and a transient (pro-) inflammatory response (MCP1), but the effects between EP and EP-GNP were not significantly different.
Industrial Classification
Knowledge Taxonomy Level 1
Knowledge Taxonomy Level 2
Knowledge Taxonomy Level 3
Funding Sponsor
European Union (EU) [785219, 881603]; NanoScreen materials challenge; Competence Centre for Materials Science and Technology (CCMX); Swiss National Science Foundation [310030_169207]
License
CC-BY
Rights
Authors
Publication Source
WOS