Cover image for Aquananotechnology : global prospects
Title:
Aquananotechnology : global prospects
Physical Description:
xxiii, 837 page : ill. ; 26 cm.
ISBN:
9781466512245

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30000010340841 TD477 A68 2015 Open Access Book Book
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Summary

Summary

The world's fresh water supplies are dwindling rapidly--even wastewater is now considered an asset. By 2025, most of the world's population will be facing serious water stresses and shortages. Aquananotechnology: Global Prospects breaks new ground with its informative and innovative introduction of the application of nanotechnology to the remediation of contaminated water for drinking and industrial use. It provides a comprehensive overview, from a global perspective, of the latest research and developments in the use of nanotechnology for water purification and desalination methods.

The book also covers approaches to remediation such as high surface area nanoscale media for adsorption of toxic species, UV treatment of pathogens, and regeneration of saturated media with applications in municipal water supplies, produced water from fracking, ballast water, and more. It also discusses membranes, desalination, sensing, engineered polymers, magnetic nanomaterials, electrospun nanofibers, photocatalysis, endocrine disruptors, and Al13 clusters. It explores physics-based phenomena such as subcritical water and cavitation-induced sonoluminescence, and fog harvesting.

With contributions from experts in developed and developing countries, including those with severe contamination, such as China, India, and Pakistan, the book's content spans a wide range of the subject areas that fall under the aquananotechnology banner, either squarely or tangentially. The book strongly emphasizes sorption media, with broad application to a myriad of contaminants--both geogenic and anthropogenic--keeping in mind that it is not enough for water to be potable, it must also be palatable.


Author Notes

David E. Reisner, PhD , is a well-known early pioneer and entrepreneur in the burgeoning field of nanotechnology, having cofounded in 1996 two nanotech companies in Connecticut, Inframat® and US Nanocorp®. For nearly 15 years, he was CEO of both companies since founding, which were recognized in Y2002-Y2005 for their fast revenue growth as Deloitte & Touche Connecticut Technology Fast50 Award recipients. In 2004, The Nano Group Inc. was formed as a parent holding company for investment. Reisner and cofounders were featured in Forbes magazine in 2004.
David has more than 175 publications and is an inventor on 10 issued patents. He is the editor for the Bionanotechnology sections of both the third edition of The BioMedical Engineering Handbook (CRC Press) and the Handbook of Research on Biomedical Engineering Education and Advanced Bioengineering Learning (IGI Global). He is editor of Bionanotechnology: Global Prospects (CRC Press) and Bionanotechnology II: Global Prospects (CRC Press) . He has written articles on the business of nanotechnology in Nanotechnology Law & Business as well as the Chinese publication Science & Culture Review.
David served a 3-year term as a Technology Pioneer for the World Economic Forum and was a panelist at the 2004 Annual Meeting in Davos. David has served on the Board of the Connecticut Venture Group and was Chairman of the Board of the Connecticut Technology Council from 2005 to 2009. He was a NASA NanoTech Briefs Nano50 awardee in 2006. For his efforts in the field of medical implantable devices, he won the first annual BEACON award for Medical Technology in 2004. He is a member of the Connecticut Academy of Science and Engineering.
David is a 1978 University Honors graduate from Wesleyan University and received his PhD from Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1983 in the field of chemical physics. An avid hiker, he summited Kilimanjaro in 1973 and is an Adirondak "46R." David was recognized for his historic preservation efforts in 1994 when he received the Volunteer Recognition Award jointly from the Connecticut Historical Commission and the Connecticut Trust for Historic Preservation. He is known nationally for his expertise in vintage Corvette restoration and documentation. David did volunteer work in Jérémie, Haiti, soon after the January 2010 earthquake.


T. Pradeep, PhD , is a professor of chemistry at the Indian Institute of Technology Madras, Chennai, India. He earned his PhD from the Indian Institute of Science in 1991 and had postdoctoral training at the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, University of California, Berkeley, and Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana. He held visiting positions at many leading universities and institutes in the United States, Europe, and Asia.
Prof. Pradeep''s research interests are in molecular and nanoscale materials, and he develops instrumentation for those studies. He has authored 300 scientific papers in journals and is an inventor in 50 patents or patent applications. He is involved with the development of affordable technologies for drinking water purification. He discovered that noble metal nanoparticles can remove halocarbon pesticide residues from drinking water, and that became the first nanomaterials-based technology to be commercialized in the drinking water segment. Along with his associates, he has incubated a company to develop technologies developed in his laboratory to marketable products.
He is a recipient of several coveted recognitions in India, including the Shanti Swaroop Bhatnagar Prize (most prestigious prize in India for scientists below age 45), B.M. Birla Science Prize (an important recognition in India for scientists below age 40), National Award for Nanoscience and Nanotechnology, and the India Nanotech Innovation Award. He is an adjunct professor at the Institute of Life Sciences, Ahmedabad University, and PSG Institute of Advanced Studies, Coimbatore. He is a fellow of the Indian Academy of Sciences and Indian National Academy of Engineering. He is on the editorial board of journals such as Nano Reviews , ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces , Particle , and Surface Innovations and is an Associate Editor of ACS Sustainable Chemistry & Engineering. His other interests include education, popularization of science, and development of advanced teaching aids. He has authored a few popular science books in Malayalam and is the recipient of the Kerala Sahitya Academi Award for knowledge literature for the year 2010. For more information, please see http://www.dstuns.iitm.ac.in/pradeep-research-group.php.


Table of Contents

Bimodal UV-Assisted Nano-TiO2 Catalyst - Crumb-Rubber Device for Treatment of Contaminated Water
Hierarchical Carbon and Hydrogels for Sensing, Remediation in Drinking Water, and Aquaculture Drug Delivery
Use of Nanomaterials in Water Remediation by Subcritical Water Process
Reduction of Priority Pollutants by Nanoscale Zerovalent Iron in Subsurface Environments
Nanotoxicity: Aquatic Organisms and Ecosystems
SonoPhotoCatalytic Cavitation (SPCC) in Water Treatment
Bilge and Ballast Water Treatment Using Nanotechnology
Nanoengineered Organosilica Materials for the Treatment of Produced Water
Arsenic Removal Metrics that Commercialized the Drinking Water Market
Commercialization of Nano from Water Sensors to Membranes
Nano-Photocatalytic Materials for Environmental Applications
Engineered Polymers and Organic-Inorganic Hybrids as Antimicrobial Materials for Water Disinfection
Key Water Treatment Technologies and Their Use by Several Industrial Segments and Future Potential for Nanotechnology
Iron-based Magnetic Nanomaterials in Wastewater Treatment
Sustainable Clean Water: Closing the Cycle
Thin Film Nanocomposite Reverse Osmosis Membranes
Technological Developments in Water Defluoridation
Nanotechnology Tunneling in the Environmental Kuznets Curve (EKC): Nano Zerovalent Iron for Underground Water Remediation
Engineered Nanomaterials for Groundwater Defluoridation
Advances in Nanostructured Polymers and Membranes for Removal of Heavy Metals in Water
Point-of-Drinking Water Purification Innovation: The Water Initiative
WaterHealth International: Decentralized Systems Provide Sustainable Drinking Water
Electrospun Nanofibers in Water Purification
Light Activated Nanotechnology for Drinking Water Purification
Modified TiO2-based Photocatalytic Systems for the Removal of Emerging Contaminants from Water
Noble Metal Nanosystems for Drinking Water Purification: from Nanoparticles to Clusters
Water Desalination: Emerging and Existing Technologies
Challenges and Opportunities for Nanotechnology in the Energy-Water Nexus
Nanotechnology in Passive Atmospheric Water Capture
Evaluation of a Zinc Clinoptilolite (ZZ®) for Drinking water Treatment
Phosphorous Removal and Recovery Using Nanotechnology
Nanomaterials Persuasive in Long History of Pursuing Perchlorates
Stormwater Runoff Treatment Using
Bioswales Augmented with Advanced Nanoengineered Materials
Graphene: Applications in Environmental Remediation and Sensing
A quantitative high-throughput assay for detection of biologically active endocrine-disrupting chemicals in water
Novel Carbon-based Nano-Adsorbents for Water Purification
Engineered Nanomaterials for Landfill Leachate Treatment in the Humid Tropics: the Sri Lankan Perspective
Al13-Cluster Nanoflocculants for Remediation of DOCs and Colloidal Particles in Water
GE Water Provides Nanotech Product Solutions