Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4425501 | Environmental Pollution | 2011 | 8 Pages |
This work investigates the physical–chemical evolution during artificial aging in water of four commercialized sunscreens containing TiO2-based nanocomposites. Sunscreens were analyzed in terms of mineralogy and TiO2 concentration. The residues formed after aging were characterized in size, shape, chemistry and surface properties. The results showed that a significant fraction of nano-TiO2 residues was released from all sunscreens, despite their heterogeneous behaviors. A stable dispersion of submicronic aggregates of nanoparticles was generated, representing up to 38 w/w% of the amount of sunscreen, and containing up to 30% of the total nano-TiO2 initially present in the creams. The stability of the dispersion was tested as a function of salt concentration, revealing that in seawater conditions, a major part of these nano-TiO2 residues will aggregate and sediment. These results were put in perspective with consumption and life cycle of sunscreens to estimate the amount of nano-TiO2 potentially released into AQUATIC environment.
► Aging of sunscreens containing nano-TiO2 releases micro-residues stable in suspension. ► They represent up to 38 w/w% of the cream and contain up to 30% of the nanoparticles. ► In seawater, a major part of these residues aggregate and settle down with sediment.