Environ. Sci. Technol., 39 (22), 8985 -8994, 2005. 10.1021/es0506509 S0013-936X(05)00650-4
Web Release Date: October 4, 2005

Copyright © 2005 American Chemical Society

Relative Risk Analysis of Several Manufactured Nanomaterials: An Insurance Industry Context

Christine Ogilvie Robichaud, Dicksen Tanzil, Ulrich Weilenmann, and Mark R. Wiesner*

Rice University, 6100 Main Street, MS 317, Houston, Texas 77005, Golder Associates, Inc., 3015 Richmond Suite 201, Houston, Texas 77098, and XL Insurance, Mythenquai 10, P.O. Box 3032, CH-8002 Zurich, Switzerland

Received for review April 5, 2005

Revised manuscript received August 12, 2005

Accepted August 28, 2005

Abstract:

A relative risk assessment is presented for the industrial fabrication of several nanomaterials. The production processes for five nanomaterials were selected for this analysis, based on their current or near-term potential for large-scale production and commercialization: single-walled carbon nanotubes, bucky balls (C60), one variety of quantum dots, alumoxane nanoparticles, and nano-titanium dioxide. The assessment focused on the activities surrounding the fabrication of nanomaterials, exclusive of any impacts or risks with the nanomaterials themselves. A representative synthesis method was selected for each nanomaterial based on its potential for scaleup. A list of input materials, output materials, and waste streams for each step of fabrication was developed and entered into a database that included key process characteristics such as temperature and pressure. The physical-chemical properties and quantities of the inventoried materials were used to assess relative risk based on factors such as volatility, carcinogenicity, flammability, toxicity, and persistence. These factors were first used to qualitatively rank risk, then combined using an actuarial protocol developed by the insurance industry for the purpose of calculating insurance premiums for chemical manufacturers. This protocol ranks three categories of risk relative to a 100 point scale (where 100 represents maximum risk): incident risk, normal operations risk, and latent contamination risk. Results from this analysis determined that relative environmental risk from manufacturing each of these five materials was comparatively low in relation to other common industrial manufacturing processes.


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