
The Periodic Tablet
June 2011
In this issue...
CPPA Events
The Financial Corner
CPPA "Tidbits"
Feature Story
Industry Spotlight
CPPA Membership Information
Welcome to the Spring edition of "The Periodic Tablet", a quarterly
publication that is circulated to members and friends of the
ChemPharma® Professional Association (CPPA). CPPA is a
nation-wide organization of business and technical executives in the
chemical, life sciences, pharmaceutical, biotechnology, and allied
industries committed to the advancement of such industries through the
exchange of information, educational programs, and personal contact
fostering career and business development.
This publication belongs to all
members, so your input is welcomed. As you achieve success
through CPPA (or see others' successes), if you find new, innovative
ways to do business or promote our industries, or if you have some
interesting or helpful information/tips to share, please let the editor
of The Periodic Tablet know at admin@chempharma.net. News items
will be published for the benefit of all members.

CPPA Spring Meeting Recap
The annual CPPA Spring meeting was held on May 16th
in central NJ and was a big success. Over 90 attendees enjoyed an
evening of networking and dinner with featured speaker Jerome Peribere,
CEO and President of Dow’s Advanced Materials Division. Mr. Peribere
spoke on the business of sustainability and Dow’s integration of
sustainability into its corporate strategy.
Were you unable to attend the Spring Meeting? View Jerome Peribere's presentation
on the May 16th event page. Scroll to the bottom of the page and click
on the arrow to view the approx. 26 minute presentation.
Look for upcoming announcements about the Fall ChemPharma meeting being held in the beginning in December 2011.
>>> CPPA "Success Stories"
GREAT
NEWS!
ChemPharma® Professional Association members continue to
report on successful landings and business dealings that have been
fostered by our organization. Below is some of the news that has
been shared about members’ successes in advancing their careers and
business relationships.
Editor’s note: I am sure that some in
our organization have landed since the last issue. Unfortunately, no
landing stories have been reported. Please, if you have landed, our
members would love to hear from you!
It is helpful to read the stories
and reports submitted by fellow members. Not only are they
uplifting and encouraging, but they can also provide some useful tips
that were picked up from their experiences. CPPA members are
encouraged to share their stories so that they can be included in a
future edition of The Periodic Tablet. To do this send, an email
to landings@chempharma.net
(you can also receive these emails by signing up for the Landing
Announcements forum under Forum Memberships in your Profile at
ChemPharma.net).
>>> The Financial Corner:
Dollar Cost Averaging for the Long-Term Investor
A time-tested strategy, dollar cost averaging can help you invest systematically for potentially greater long-term return.
Dollar cost averaging* can be a powerful investment strategy.
You place a fixed amount of money into an investment at regular
intervals, regardless of the daily fluctuations in the market. Because
the amount that you invest remains fixed, you may ultimately purchase
more shares when the market is low and fewer shares when the market is
high. Over time, the average price of your shares may often be lower
than if you invested all at once.
Dollar cost averaging takes the guesswork and emotional
factors out of investing. You invest regularly, regardless of whether
the market is rising or falling. With this approach, the objective is to
resist the temptation to sell or postpone purchases when stock prices
decline. In fact, the lower the share price, the more shares you acquire
for your money. The chart below shows how you can potentially lower
your average cost per share in differing types of markets.
Dollar Cost Averaging Can Put Market Fluctuations to Work for You.

* Dollar cost averaging does not assure a profit and does not
protect against losses in a declining market. In contemplation of
implementing such strategies, investors should consider their financial
ability to continue making purchases though periods of low price levels.
The above figures represent a hypothetical investment. The
rates of return are for illustration purposes only. There is no
guarantee of investment performance implied or otherwise. For more
information about dollar-cost averaging, contact your financial
professional. AXA Advisors, LLC does not provide legal or tax advice.
Please consult your tax or legal advisor regarding your individual
situation.
This article is provided by Michael Chiappinelli. Michael
Chiappinelli offers securities and investment advisory services through
AXA Advisors, LLC (member FINRA, SIPC) 40 Monument Road, Bala Cynwyd, PA
19004, and offers annuity and insurance products through an insurance
brokerage affiliate, AXA Network, LLC and its subsidiaries. GE-62667
(05/11)
>>> CPPA "Tidbits":
Join in the Conversation...Sign up for Forums
In order to receive announcements about jobs, networking, and member requests, you need to sign up for these Forums.
- Log into the ChemPharma web site
- Click on the Profile Link
- Click on the Forum Memberships link under Web Site
- Join the Forums you’re interested in
Increase Your Networking Effectiveness
There are a number of ways to increase your networking effectiveness with other CPPA members…
- Make sure you have completed your member profile
- If you are a Consultant, make sure you have completed your Consultant page in addition to your member profile
- Introduce yourself to other members through the New Member Forum
- Copy their resume body and any other relevant info (perhaps your LinkedIn summary), into an email and send it to new@chempharma.net.
The forums have powerful keyword search capability. So if you can’t be
found in the Member Search, you will be found in the Forum Search. But
not if you are not there.
- EVERY member, new and old, should post at least once to this Forum to create a history for each of you. Use a descriptive subject line with your name, title, and industries for those who are visually scanning the forum postings.
- Post a Request through the Request Forum
Lots of Useful Tools Can be Found in the Member's Document Library
We continue to grow our Document Library with useful tool for
our members. Have you visited the Document Library to see our Member
Tools? To access the Member Tools,
- Log in to the CPPA website as a Member
- Click on Members Only, then Documents
- Under Member Tools, click on View to see the sub-folders available
- Click on the View Documents button under the section you are interested in
Do you have some information you think other members could
benefit from? Help us to grow our Member Tools sections. Upload a
document today!
LinkedIn
ChemPharma®
Professional Association members are automatically part of the CPPA LinkedIn group when they
become members. This means members are connected to every other
active CPPA member and have instant access to the national association
of >300 members immediately! It is a great benefit of
membership. Existing ChemPharma
LinkedIn members are encouraged to add their CPPA affiliation to
their profile.
When joining LinkedIn, members create a profile that summarizes
their professional accomplishments. This profile helps members find and
be found by former colleagues, clients, and partners. Individuals
can add more connections by inviting trusted contacts to join LinkedIn
and connect to them. A LinkedIn network consists of direct
connections, the connections' of connections, and the people these
connections know, linking members to thousands of qualified
professionals.
ChemPharma® Alliances
ChemPharma® Professional Association recently established an
alliance with the Chemical Marketing and Economics Group of the New York
section of the American Chemical Society (CM&E). Visit the
Alliances page under the “About Us” tab on the CPPA website to read the details about this new alliance.
Click here to go to the Alliances page now.
The ChemPharma® Professional Association actively
seeks out and establishes alliances with other leadership organizations
to expand professional and business growth and networking opportunities
for our members.
To-date these alliances include:
- Greater Philadelphia Senior Executive Group (GPSEG)
- Commercial Development and Marketing Association (CDMA)
- Pharmaceutical Project Management Local Interest Group (BioPharmaPM)
- Chicago Section Institute of Food Technologists (CSIFT)
- Chemical Marketing and Economics Group of the New York Section of the American Chemical Society (CM&E)
Our alliances enable ChemPharma members to network with alliance
organizations by attending each other’s open programs at member
rates. Open programs include social and educational events,
presentations, and workshops. We invite you to take advantage of
these opportunities.
Please visit the Alliances
page under the “About Us” tab on the CPPA website for the latest
information about ChemPharma’s Alliances.
>>> Feature Story
Chemical and Engineering News, June 14, 2011
Supreme Court Backs Strong Patents
Intellectual Property: Justices uphold high hurdle for proving a patent is invalid
By: Glenn Hess
The Supreme Court has rejected a bid by Microsoft
to make it easier to challenge the validity of patents in litigation, a
victory for drug makers and other businesses that rely on the strength
of their patent portfolios.
The justices unanimously upheld a record $290 million verdict
against the software giant for infringing a small Canadian company's
patent and affirmed a long-standing requirement that a defendant in an
infringement case prove by clear and convincing evidence that a
plaintiff's patent is invalid (C&EN, June 13, page 27).
Microsoft had argued that a judge or jury should be able to
overturn a patent if only a preponderance of the evidence indicates it
is invalid, a lesser standard of proof.
The biotech sector "felt that this was maybe the most
important patent case to go to the Supreme Court in a decade," says Hans
Sauer, deputy general counsel for intellectual property at the Biotechnology Industry Organization (BIO), a trade group representing 1,100 companies.
BIO saw the case as "a great threat because biotech more than
most industries depends on patents as strong and enduring legal
instruments that cannot be overturned on a mere coin toss, " Sauer tells
C&EN. "You can't have a sustainable biotech business without being
able to rely on your patents to a stronger degree than just that for
product development, investment, and partnering decisions," he says.
The legal fight began in 2007 when Toronto-based i4i
sued Microsoft. A jury found that Microsoft had infringed i4i's patent
relating to text manipulation software. After a federal appeals court
upheld the award, Microsoft turned to the Supreme Court.
"Microsoft tried to gut the value of patents by introducing a
lower standard for invalidating patents. It is now 100% clear that you
can only invalidate a patent based on clear and convincing evidence,"
says i4i Chairman Loudon Owen.
Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote that any change in the standard
of proof for patent invalidity would have to be made by Congress. She
noted in the court's opinion that the standard of clear and convincing
evidence was nearly 30 years old and had been left untouched by
lawmakers.
>>> Industry Spotlight: Nanotechnology
Chemical and Engineering News, June 13, 2011
Building Small
Nanotechnology makes inroads in the construction industry
By: Bethany Halford
Liao Yusheng
TEMPLE OF NANOSCIENCE Rome’s Dio Padre Misericordioso Church,
also known as the Jubilee Church, retains its bright white color
because of nanostructured titanium dioxide.
With its soaring concrete sails reaching high into the sky, the Dio Padre Misericordioso Church,
just east of central Rome, beckons religious and architectural devotees
alike. The structure is also something of a temple to nanoscience—for
it retains its bright white hue thanks to the presence of nanostructured
titanium dioxide particles embedded within the cement binder that was
used to make its concrete walls.
Completed in 2003, the church, also known as the Jubilee
Church, is a flagship when it comes to the use of nanotechnology in
construction. But there are more humble examples, too. Whether it’s in
steel, concrete, or windows, nanotechnology is finding a growing number
of applications in the construction industry, where it promises to make
structures that last for centuries and look as clean as the day they
were built.
One only has to look at the Jubilee Church to see why it is
the foremost example of what nanotechnology has to offer the
construction industry. It was designed by Richard Meier,
an American architect with a reputation for creating bright white
structures that he wants to stay that way. So far, the concrete shows no
signs of darkening. Italcementi,
the company that supplied the material for the church, checks it each
year for signs that its white color is still as bright as the day it was
cast.
Nanostructured TiO2 particles theoretically will
keep the concrete white forever, even in smoggy Rome, says Luigi Cassar,
one of the material’s inventors. Titanium dioxide, known for its snowy
white hue, is used as a pigment in paint and food coloring. But it has
self-cleaning properties as well. When ultraviolet light strikes the
anatase form of TiO2, it excites the material so that it becomes a catalyst for oxidizing organic grime.
And the concrete doesn’t just resist smog, it eats smog. The
same photocatalytic chemistry that keeps the church clean also cleans
the air around it, gobbling up NOx, SOx, carbon
monoxide, aromatics, ammonia, and aldehydes. Italcementi estimates that
if it covered 15% of the visible surfaces of a large urban area, such as
Milan, with its current product containing the smog-eating
nanostructured substance, TX Active, it could cut the city’s air
pollution in half.
“The nanotechnology ideas finding their way into construction in a practical way are probably now starting to gain momentum.”
“The work started from a marketing request to make a white
concrete stabilized with respect to pollutants,” says Cassar, a research
and development consultant who served as Italcementi’s corporate
R&D director until 2006. Cassar and his research group began working
on the project in 1994 and filed two patents in 1996 and 1997 for the
photoactive cement, which is used as a binder to make the white
concrete. It was first used in a construction project in 2000, for the
Cité de la Musique building in Chambéry, France. Subsequently, the
material was chosen for the Jubilee Church, as well as other projects
around the world.
“I am an old chemist. I worked in several industries before
coming to Italcementi,” Cassar says. “I never worked on cement before,
but the mechanism of TiO2’s photodecomposition was known in
other materials, such as polymers.” Even so, he adds, his group at
Italcementi was surprised to see that TiO2 particles
nanostructured to have a high surface area were so active when used in
concrete. “We observed a synergistic effect between the photocatalyst
and the concrete because concrete is a porous material which absorbs
pollutants, helping them to de compose.”
Although the photocatalytic cleaning effect is observed in most forms of anatase TiO2,
Cassar says it’s important that the material be nanostructured to have a
high surface area in the cement application. The material used in
Italcementi’s cement has more than 200 m2 of surface area per gram.
“Improvement of the material is ongoing,” Cassar tells
C&EN. The TX Active material currently sold by Italcementi is more
efficient than the cement that went into the Jubilee Church, he adds.
They’ve also improved the price. When the Jubilee Church was
built, Cassar estimates, the special cement cost 10 times as much as
standard cement. Now, depending upon the application, its cost can be as
low as three times that of conventional material.
BASF
CRYSTALLIZING CONCRETE This colorized scanning electron
micrograph shows concrete (brown) crystallizing around X- Seed crystals
(blue), 500 nm to 30 µm across.
Even with such high-profile buildings,
nanotechnology’s progress has been somewhat slow in the construction
industry, where tight bottom lines don’t always leave room for
technological advances. “Construction is rather different from other
industrial sectors,” says Peter J. M. Bartos, former head of the
Scottish Centre for Nanotechnology in Construction at the University of
the West of Scotland. “Unlike other industries, for example,
microelectronics, aerospace, or even the automotive industry, the level
of investment in construction research is very low.”
Also, Bartos says, “the construction industry is dominated by
small and medium-sized companies. There are no big players in
construction like there are in the chemical industry, where there are
massive R&D efforts. Most of construction is, in fact, done by small
companies that just employ a few people.”
Surendra P. Shah,
a civil engineering professor at Northwestern University and the former
director of the school’s Center for Advanced Cement-Based Materials,
has spent more than a decade studying how nanotechnology can improve
cement and concrete. He agrees with Bartos that there’s been growing
interest in bringing nanotechnology into the construction industry, but,
he says, “as far as commercial applications are concerned, it’s still
in the beginning stage.” Shah thinks there are promising applications,
and he notes that the growing presence of nanotechnology in construction
materials prompted the National Academies’ Transportation Research
Board to hold a symposium on the use of nanotechnology in concrete and
cement last year.
One area in which Shah’s group has been conducting research
is using carbon nanotubes and nanofibers to reinforce cement and
concrete. “When you see cement and concrete, you see cracks because it’s
a brittle material,” he explains. “These cracks start at the nanoscale.
We have shown that once you know how to disperse them, very small
amounts of carbon nanotubes, such as 0.05%, can substantially increase
the cracking resistance.”
Well-dispersed carbon nanotubes or carbon nanofibers alter
cement’s nanostructure, providing reinforcement, Shah notes. “That’s
exciting because that’s what nanotechnology is about, altering materials
at the nanoscale,” he says.
Nanotechnology can also make concrete a more sustainable
material, Shah says. For example, fly ash, a by-product of coal
production that would otherwise be dumped in a landfill, can be used in
place of cement to make concrete. The problem, Shah explains, is that
the concrete-making hydration chemistry takes longer with fly ash.
Seeding fly-ash concrete with small amounts of
nanoparticulate silica can accelerate hydration, Shah says, so you could
use fly-ash concrete and have the same speed of construction that you
would when using conventional concrete. Furthermore, he adds, the
nanoparticles change the nanostructure of hydrated cement, thereby
improving durability.
Chemical giant BASF
has already taken this seeding idea and created a commercial product
for speeding up the hardening process for conventional concrete. Known
as X-Seed, the product contains nanocrystals of calcium silicate
hydrate. The extremely small size of the X-Seed crystals creates many
sites for nucleation, accelerating the speed at which the concrete
hardens.
Practically, that means that it’s possible to make precast
concrete structures, such as bridge girders, sewer pipes, and
staircases, faster than it would take without X-Seed, says Bruce
Christensen, BASF’s vice president of global technology and innovation
management for construction chemicals. The company estimates that X-Seed
can cut hardening time for precast concrete structures from 12 hours to
six hours at ambient temperature.
“It’s not something that’s a completely new idea,”
Christensen says of X-Seed. According to the patent literature and
publications, using nanoparticles to accelerate hydration in concrete
was proposed decades ago. “Our research group has found some creative
ways to make the particles in such a way to realize the seeding effect,”
he says. Specifically, the researchers developed some polymer
technology to keep the nanocrystals from fusing together when dispersed
in solution.
MMFX
NANOSTRUCTURED STEEL MMFX 2 steel rebar, which resists
corrosion because of its nanostructure, strenghtens the foundation of a
bridge in Tarpon Springs, Fla.
As far as cement-related products go, BASF also makes a
whole line of additives bearing the nano moniker, including Nanocrete,
Nanoflott, Nanolight, and Nanosilent. These products don’t contain
nanoparticles, Christensen explains; rather, they form nanostructures as
they’re used. “Nanostructures have been around for centuries in that
regard, but we are understanding better and better how these
nanostructures form and in which way this process can be influenced to
enhance the properties of the material,” he says.
BASF’s use of nanotechnology in construction materials isn’t
limited to cementitious products. They also make Col.9, a dispersion of
organic plastic polymer particles and nanoscale particles of silica,
which is used as a binder to produce façade paints. According to the
company, this combination of elastic organic material and hard mineral
resists cracking in cold temperatures but doesn’t become tacky when it’s
hot outside.
The nanoparticles in Col.9 are also hydrophilic, spreading
rainwater across the surface of the coated area. During heavy rain, this
property helps the coated surface wash away dirt, and after the rain,
it disperses any remaining water into a thin film that dries quickly,
thereby preventing mold.
Christensen expects nanotechnology’s presence in construction
chemicals to grow. “The nanotechnology ideas finding their way into
construction in a practical way are probably now starting to gain
momentum” because the first commercial products have finally hit the
shelves, he says.
Another nanostructured building product that’s on the market is a type of steel, known as MMFX 2, developed by MMFX Technologies.
Its inventor, University of California, Berkeley, materials science
professor Gareth Thomas, first used electron microscopy to peer into
steel’s nanostructure in the 1980s. Twenty years later, Thomas led MMFX
in developing a series of key patents for making nanostructured steel.
“Making steel was always a black art or a black science,”
says MMFX founder and former chief executive officer David C. Pollack.
“They used to heat, beat, and hope. They kind of understood what was
going on, but with electron microscopy they could actually see what was
happening at the nanoscale,” he says. “This gave us a whole new
understanding.
“Conventional steel, when it cools, goes through a
transformation where it loses its affinity for binding carbon. What
happens then is carbon precipitates and that precipitation forms
carbides at the grain boundaries,” Pollack explains. “These carbides are
very hard, but they’re also very brittle and they’re dissimilar to the
rest of the steel microstructure. They’re the Achilles’ heel of the
steel.”
In a moist environment, Pollack continues, the carbides form a
microgalvanic cell with the steel’s ferrites, which begins to corrode
the steel from within. But MMFX 2 steel is different. It’s made of
alternating nanoscale layers of austenite and martensite—two crystal
forms of steel—and is virtually carbide-free at the grain boundaries.
Without the carbides at the grain boundaries, the material is
ductile, rather than brittle, and resists the corrosion seen in
conventional steel. The nanolayered structure also makes the material
strong, Pollack says, because it’s composed of both hard and soft layers
of material that can bend without breaking.
MMFX 2 steel is made with conventional steel-making
equipment. Pollack says that when talking about nanotechnology, people
often marvel at materials made by the gram. “In the case of MMFX, we can
make nanotechnology at 100 tons an hour,” he says.
The material has been used in buildings, highways, and
bridges and has an expected service life of 200 years. And because it’s
twice as strong as conventional steel, Pollack notes, structures require
less steel to do the same job. So although the steel itself is more
expensive than conventional material, labor costs are reduced.
Pilkington
CLEAR COATING Windows at the Museum of the Earth in Ithaca, N.Y., stay clean, thanks to a nanoscale coating of TiO2.
A sector of the construction industry where
nanotechnology has been making a clear difference in products is in
window glass. By adding a nanoscale coating of TiO2 to glass, companies make low-maintenance windows that can clean themselves.
It’s the same chemistry that keeps the Jubilee Church in Rome clean: UV light activates TiO2
so that it oxidizes organic grime, both directly and by converting
water vapor into hydroxyl radicals that can convert organic compounds
into CO2.
The practice of using titanium dioxide to make surfaces
self-cleaning is fairly old, says Chris Barry, director of technical
services at the glass-making company Pilkington. But TiO2
is typically white, so it was mainly used in paints. “What is new is
the ability to make the coating in a thin enough layer to put it on
window glass so that you can see through it and it can be applied
uniformly enough so that it doesn’t make streaks or variations in the
appearance of the glass,” Barry explains. “We make four invisible
coatings. One of the biggest problems we have is to make sure that the
glazier knows how to install the glass properly so it’s not put in
backward.”
In addition to TiO2’s photocatalytic properties,
the material also becomes hydrophilic when exposed to UV light. “It’s an
invisible squeegee effect,” Barry says. “Normally, when rain falls onto
glass, it tends to bead up and run down in rivulets, but if the glass
is hydrophilic and attracts water, then the water will run down as a
sheet and it has a flushing action that’s quite effective in removing
specks of inorganic dirt, such as silica sand.
“The chemistry of it is very elegant and beautiful,” Barry
says of the self-cleaning glass, but he cautions that windows with such
coatings won’t always be squeaky clean. “The coating works at the
molecular level, and dirt tends to be at the macro level: bird
droppings, a lump of spiderweb, resin from a tree. You’re asking a
two-dimensional coating to break down a three-dimensional mountain of
material. It doesn’t happen instantly. And if you’ve got inorganic dust
on a window, it won’t be clean until you get some rain.”
To create a coating that’s just 50-nm thick for its
self-cleaning Activ line of windows, Pilkington uses chemical vapor
deposition to apply the material to freshly formed glass while it’s
still under a nitrogen atmosphere. “We pass the glass under beams that
expose the top surface to TiO2 vapors,” Barry explains. The coating “fuses perfectly with the ultraclean surface of the glass.”
The company uses the same technique to apply nanoscale
coatings of other chemicals. Silica and silicon coatings, known as
solar-control coatings, help regulate the amount of heat from sunlight
that comes through the window, thereby cutting down on air-conditioning
use. Low-emissivity coatings, made from fluorine-doped tin oxide,
prevent infrared heat from escaping a building, reducing overall heating
costs.
Although nanotechnology has matured in certain sectors
of the construction industry, most people working in the field expect
many more advances in the future. George Elvin,
an architecture professor at Ball State University and director of
Green Technology Forum, an information hub that focuses on emerging
green technologies in architecture, has been studying the intersection
of the two disciplines for a decade. He teaches a course in which
students examine nanotechnology advances that have been proven in the
lab and envision how they could be used in architectural works should
they ever be commercialized.
“For example, if you look at the strength-to-weight ratio of
carbon nanotubes, they are many times stronger than steel and yet
lighter. They can be transparent; they can conduct electricity,” Elvin
says. “If you could have large-scale sheets of
carbon-nanotube-reinforced transparent material, then you could have a
building structure that basically looked like a glass window. You really
wouldn’t have the traditional components of columns and beams or
concrete and steel that we have now.”
The area of sensors also sparks a lot of interest in the
construction industry, says Pedro J. J. Alvarez, chair of the civil and
environmental engineering department at Rice University, who wrote a
review about nanotechnology in construction last year (ACS Nano, DOI: 10.1021/nn100866w).
Such nanoscale sensors would be embedded within a structure’s
foundation and could “give you early warnings if you need to do
something about a bridge or a building,” Alvarez says.
Both Elvin and Alvarez note, however, that despite the
enormous potential of nanotechnology in construction, no one knows for
certain whether there will be adverse consequences. “Unfortunately, we
haven’t always had the best track record in how we have used technology,
and we have found out after the fact that certain applications, in some
cases, were quite harmful, such as asbestos,” Elvin says. He notes a
recent study that showed how TiO2 nanoparticles may disrupt the nitrogen cycle in aquatic ecosystems (Environ. Sci. Technol., DOI: 10.1021/es101658p).
But Alvarez cautions that current studies on nanomaterials’
adverse effects might not paint a realistic picture of exposure to
humans. “We are using test animals or cells or bacteria that are exposed
to exaggeratedly high concentrations to elicit a response,” he says.
“The concentrations that are harmful, at least for acute exposure, tend
to be unrealistically high, much higher than a person would likely be
exposed to.”
Furthermore, Alvarez says, studies often look at
nanomaterials in their virgin form, when in reality what people will be
exposed to are nanoparticles that have been embedded in some sort of
matrix or that have been weathered in the environment. Such particles
are expected to undergo transformations that reduce the materials’
bioavailability and toxicity. “As the result of that, we are really
looking at the worst possible scenarios that are not really realistic,”
he notes.
For now, Alvarez says, the key is to minimize exposure. For
the construction industry that means making sure nanomaterials won’t
leach out of structures easily. More important, Alvarez says, is to make
sure that the workers who handle these materials as they’re created
wear proper respiratory protective equipment. “Exposure control is
extremely important, and that is clearly within our means because we
protect ourselves from things that are much nastier,” he says.
Ultimately, Alvarez thinks that nanotechnology will
revolutionize the construction industry. “But we’re at the infancy right
now,” he says. “Before we move too fast, let’s make sure that the risk
assessment and the eco-responsible use, design, and disposal don’t fall
too far behind. We want to use nanotechnology as a tool for
sustainability, and we want to make sure that we’re not creating a
future environmental or public health liability.”
>>> CPPA Membership Information
If
you are interested in joining the ChemPharma® Professional
Association we encourage you to learn more about our organization and
how to join by visiting: http://www.chempharma.net/.
To be eligible to be a member of ChemPharma® Professional
Association (CPPA), the following requirements now apply:
- Must have 10 or more years experience in the
chemical, pharmaceutical, biotechnology, life sciences, or
allied industries.
- Typically have been in middle/upper management.
- Typically have had total annual compensation of "6 figures" or
greater.
- Should have a substantial number of senior level contacts and
connections in your field, and be willing to share contacts and
industry insight as appropriate and able with other members.
- Must have a current member to sponsor your membership, and pass
final approval by the Membership Committee.
- Pay a one-time fee as part of the membership application, along
with your dues for the first year. Members in good standing pay annual
dues in subsequent years.
- Be an active and supportive member through networking and
participation in chapter meetings and evening events.
To find a sponsoring member, you are invited to attend a local
chapter meeting, introduce yourself to a member, and ask him/her to be
a sponsor. The locations and schedules of CPPA chapter meetings
are posted on http://www.chempharma.net/.
To find a nearby meeting, simply visit the Web site and click on
"Meeting Information". If it’s not possible to attend a meeting,
simply search the membership list by function or by geography to find
members who have a similar background or who live nearby. E-mail
a member, attach a resume, and ask to be sponsored. To view the
membership list, please click on Functions and Profiles. If it’s
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Your Periodic Tablet
Editor: J. Gary McDaniel; Special
Thanks to Debra Sesholtz and Tom Smith for their valuable
input!