Many
 human-made pollutants in the environment resist degradation through 
natural processes, and disrupt hormonal and other systems in mammals and
 other animals. Removing these toxic materials — which include 
pesticides and endocrine disruptors such as bisphenol A (BPA) — with 
existing methods is often expensive and time-consuming.
In a new paper published this week in Nature Communications,
 researchers from MIT and the Federal University of Goiás in Brazil 
demonstrate a novel method for using nanoparticles and ultraviolet (UV) 
light to quickly isolate and extract a variety of contaminants from soil
 and water.
Ferdinand Brandl and Nicolas Bertrand, the two lead authors, are 
former postdocs in the laboratory of Robert Langer, the David H. Koch 
Institute Professor at MIT’s Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer 
Research. (Eliana Martins Lima, of the Federal University of Goiás, is 
the other co-author.) Both Brandl and Bertrand are trained as 
pharmacists, and describe their discovery as a happy accident: They 
initially sought to develop nanoparticles that could be used to deliver 
drugs to cancer cells.
Brandl had previously synthesized polymers that could be cleaved 
apart by exposure to UV light. But he and Bertrand came to question 
their suitability for drug delivery, since UV light can be damaging to 
tissue and cells, and doesn’t penetrate through the skin. When they 
learned that UV light was used to disinfect water in certain treatment 
plants, they began to ask a different question.
“We thought if they are already using UV light, maybe they could use 
our particles as well,” Brandl says. “Then we came up with the idea to 
use our particles to remove toxic chemicals, pollutants, or hormones 
from water, because we saw that the particles aggregate once you 
irradiate them with UV light.”
A trap for ‘water-fearing’ pollution
The researchers synthesized polymers from polyethylene glycol, a 
widely used compound found in laxatives, toothpaste, and eye drops and 
approved by the Food and Drug Administration as a food additive, and 
polylactic acid, a biodegradable plastic used in compostable cups and 
glassware.
Nanoparticles made from these polymers have a hydrophobic core and a 
hydrophilic shell. Due to molecular-scale forces, in a solution 
hydrophobic pollutant molecules move toward the hydrophobic 
nanoparticles, and adsorb onto their surface, where they effectively 
become “trapped.” This same phenomenon is at work when spaghetti sauce 
stains the surface of plastic containers, turning them red: In that 
case, both the plastic and the oil-based sauce are hydrophobic and 
interact together.
If left alone, these nanomaterials would remain suspended and 
dispersed evenly in water. But when exposed to UV light, the stabilizing
 outer shell of the particles is shed, and — now “enriched” by the 
pollutants — they form larger aggregates that can then be removed 
through filtration, sedimentation, or other methods.
The researchers used the method to extract phthalates, 
hormone-disrupting chemicals used to soften plastics, from wastewater; 
BPA, another endocrine-disrupting synthetic compound widely used in 
plastic bottles and other resinous consumer goods, from thermal printing
 paper samples; and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, carcinogenic 
compounds formed from incomplete combustion of fuels, from contaminated 
soil.
The process is irreversible and the polymers are biodegradable, 
minimizing the risks of leaving toxic secondary products to persist in, 
say, a body of water. “Once they switch to this macro situation where 
they’re big clumps,” Bertrand says, “you won’t be able to bring them 
back to the nano state again.”
The fundamental breakthrough, according to the researchers, was 
confirming that small molecules do indeed adsorb passively onto the 
surface of nanoparticles.
“To the best of our knowledge, it is the first time that the 
interactions of small molecules with pre-formed nanoparticles can be 
directly measured,” they write in Nature Communications.
Nano cleansing 
Even more exciting, they say, is the wide range of potential uses, from environmental remediation to medical analysis.
The polymers are synthesized at room temperature, and don’t need to 
be specially prepared to target specific compounds; they are broadly 
applicable to all kinds of hydrophobic chemicals and molecules.
“The interactions we exploit to remove the pollutants are 
non-specific,” Brandl says. “We can remove hormones, BPA, and pesticides
 that are all present in the same sample, and we can do this in one 
step.”
And the nanoparticles’ high surface-area-to-volume ratio means that 
only a small amount is needed to remove a relatively large quantity of 
pollutants. The technique could thus offer potential for the 
cost-effective cleanup of contaminated water and soil on a wider scale.
“From the applied perspective, we showed in a system that the 
adsorption of small molecules on the surface of the nanoparticles can be
 used for extraction of any kind,” Bertrand says. “It opens the door for
 many other applications down the line.”
This approach could possibly be further developed, he speculates, to 
replace the widespread use of organic solvents for everything from 
decaffeinating coffee to making paint thinners. Bertrand cites DDT, 
banned for use as a pesticide in the U.S. since 1972 but still widely 
used in other parts of the world, as another example of a persistent 
pollutant that could potentially be remediated using these 
nanomaterials. “And for analytical applications where you don’t need as 
much volume to purify or concentrate, this might be interesting,” 
Bertrand says, offering the example of a cheap testing kit for urine 
analysis of medical patients.
The study also suggests the broader potential for adapting nanoscale 
drug-delivery techniques developed for use in environmental remediation.
“That we can apply some of the highly sophisticated, high-precision 
tools developed for the pharmaceutical industry, and now look at the use
 of these technologies in broader terms, is phenomenal,” says Frank Gu, 
an assistant professor of chemical engineering at the University of 
Waterloo in Canada, and an expert in nanoengineering for health care and
 medical applications.
“When you think about field deployment, that’s far down the road, but
 this paper offers a really exciting opportunity to crack a problem that
 is persistently present,” says Gu, who was not involved in the 
research. “If you take the normal conventional civil engineering or 
chemical engineering approach to treating it, it just won’t touch it. 
That’s where the most exciting part is.”