By Ben Coxworth 14:45 June 7, 2012The NANOMOSKI process
utilizes silica nanoparticles to render clothing mosquito-repellant For many of us, mosquitoes are an irritating
pest that can ruin any number of outdoor activities. For many others, however,
they are also spreaders of malaria – a disease which infected approximately 216
million people in 2010, according to an estimate by the World Health
Organization. Repeatedly slathering on bug repellant is one way of dealing with
the insects, although wearing clothing made from mosquito-repellant fabric
sounds a lot more preferable. While existing mozzie-unfriendly garments have
some limitations, Portuguese tech company Nanolabel has developed a new
treatment process that it claims is far superior to traditional technology. Known as NANOMOSKI, the process involves
impregnating textiles with amorphous silica (silicon dioxide) nanoparticles.
Immobilized in the pores of these particles is a “non-toxic active substance”
that isn’t too popular with the mosquitoes. In tests performed at Lisbon ’s Institute
of Hygiene and Tropical
Medicine, that substance repelled 81 percent of Anopheles gambiae mosquitoes,
while keeping 89 percent of them from feeding. By contrast, textiles treated
with microencapsulated DEET (which is definitely not non-toxic) had a
repellency index of 40 percent, and a feeding inhibition of 65 percent. While Nanolabel is keeping the identity of
the active substance under wraps, the company claims that it has been in use
for over 30 years, and “is proven biocompatible and is classified by EPA with
the lowest degree of toxicity (grade IV) in all categories.” The silicon dioxide is essentially just sand,
and is environmentally innocuous. The particles are larger than 100 nanometers,
which puts them well above the size of permeability of human skin – or that of
other animals that have been tested.
Silica nanoparticles deposited on textile fibers, using the NANOMOSKI
process In a conventional finishing process which can
be conducted at regular fabric-dying facilities, the nanoparticles are
reportedly deposited into the material, as opposed to just adhering to the
outer surface of its fibers. In lab tests, this allowed the particles to remain
in the material for up to 90 washes – although by that point, the repellant content
was down to 35 percent. That said, according to the company, a maximum of 40
washes is presently considered "good" for conventional
anti-mosquito-treated clothing. Corporate
buyers are currently being sought for the technology. Source: Nanolabel
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