Sep 3 2010
Intertek, the leading provider of quality and safety services to a wide range of industries, expands its portfolio by offering solutions to help businesses bring nanotechnology-based materials and products to the marketplace. The use of nanotechnology by product designers and developers to improve product quality and performance is an emerging area.
Nanotechnology is everywhere. In 2005, nanotechnology was incorporated into more than $30 billion in manufactured goods. By 2014, Lux Research estimates $2.6 trillion in manufactured goods will incorporate nanotechnology - approximately 15 percent of total global output. Over the last five years, industries from consumer goods to pharmaceuticals to energy have been deploying the use of nanotechnology1. In essence, nanotechnology will affect the way companies do business. Specifically, nanotechnology is used by almost every industry today because companies can do more with less. Nanotechnology provides new opportunities for any industry to deploy and manipulate products more than any other method or system allows. Additionally, nanotechnology allows for one product to interface with another product where this might not have been the case by using a different form of technology or other best practice.
The economic impact of nanotechnology is on the rise. As companies have been deploying this new form of technology, the effect has resulted in a significant business impact across all industries. Investment in nanotechnology research and development by industry and governments worldwide has increased dramatically. Some estimates suggest that nanotechnology-based products will contribute approximately $1 trillion to the global economy by 2015.2 As a result, nanotechnology is intertwined in business operations from inception to completion and is only increasing its value as more and more organizations integrate it into day-day operations.
The nature of nanotechnology and the fast pace of its development means that many new and unique nanomaterials are being created. Companies that produce or use nanomaterials need to analyze, understand and test the way that they may perform or interact within their intended user-environment or marketplace. The properties of nanomaterials that render them unique, such as their size, relative surface area, chemistry and functionality, should be evaluated unanticipated biological effects and toxicity in humans and the environment. Some stakeholders are pushing for stronger regulation of nanotechnology to control unintended risks.
Intertek is providing performance, analytical, characterization, and clinical testing and consulting services to help businesses bring nanotechnology-based materials and products to the marketplace. These include the collection of information pertaining to design, manufacturing, testing, analyzing nanoparticle toxicology studies, consulting on regulatory guidelines, assessing the health and environmental effects of nanomaterials, and tailoring necessary materials for research and development.
"Nanotechnology represents the future of product design and development for the additional characteristics these materials bring in terms of more potent, more active, smaller than usual and thus new uses, better potential selectivity, and penetration. But as with any emerging technologies or scientific innovations, companies need to test and analyse the impact of their use of these to ensure they meet global health and environment compliance requirements," states Dr. Ruud Overbeek, Vice President of Intertek's Health and Environment. "Our range of nanotechnology solutions can assist our customers through the entire product lifecycle, from research and development through marketing"
Source: http://www.intertek.com/