Prospective environmental life cycle assessment of nanosilver T-shirts

Walser, T; Demou, E; Lang, DJ; Hellweg, S

HERO ID

782611

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2011

Language

English

PMID

21506582

HERO ID 782611
In Press No
Year 2011
Title Prospective environmental life cycle assessment of nanosilver T-shirts
Authors Walser, T; Demou, E; Lang, DJ; Hellweg, S
Journal Environmental Science & Technology
Volume 45
Issue 10
Page Numbers 4570-4578
Abstract A cradle-to-grave life cycle assessment (LCA) is performed to compare nanosilver T-shirts with conventional T-shirts with and without biocidal treatment. For nanosilver production and textile incorporation, we investigate two processes: flame spray pyrolysis (FSP) and plasma polymerization with silver co-sputtering (PlaSpu). Prospective environmental impacts due to increased nanosilver T-shirt commercialization are estimated with six scenarios. Results show significant differences in environmental burdens between nanoparticle production technologies: The "cradle-to-gate" climate footprint of the production of a nanosilver T-shirt is 2.70 kg of CO(2)-equiv (FSP) and 7.67-166 kg of CO(2)-equiv (PlaSpu, varying maturity stages). Production of conventional T-shirts with and without the biocide triclosan has emissions of 2.55 kg of CO(2)-equiv (contribution from triclosan insignificant). Consumer behavior considerably affects the environmental impacts during the use phase. Lower washing frequencies can compensate for the increased climate footprint of FSP nanosilver T-shirt production. The toxic releases from washing and disposal in the life cycle of T-shirts appear to be of minor relevance. By contrast, the production phase may be rather significant due to toxic silver emissions at the mining site if high silver quantities are required.
Doi 10.1021/es2001248
Pmid 21506582
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Is Qa No