Nanotubes probably safe, Nobel winner says
Will nanotubes be the next asbestos and cause massive health problems? Probably not, says Richard Smalley, the Nobel Prize winner who discovered fullerene carbon, the carbon used in nanotubes. But scientists, health officials and others who work closely w
"A nanotube is the most rigid rod you will ever make, but in a cell level, it will be like spaghetti," he said during a question-and-answer session at the International Electron Devices Meeting in San Francisco this week.
Nanotubes are incorporated into polymers and other materials, so it would be hard for people who don't work in a manufacturing facility that uses the tubes to ingest them. "I'm talking about a hunk of plastic with very little of the stuff in it."
Nonetheless, scientists have to make sure "there isn't some crack that will allow these things to slip through," he added. After all, few people saw the consequences of pesticides until Rachel Carson's "Silent Spring". As a result, Rice University, where Smalley teaches, is conducting toxicology tests.