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ISO/TS 27106:2013 provides comprehensive guidance on the detection of nanomaterials for regulatory compliance, product safety assessment, and environmental monitoring. Unlike quantification-focused protocols, this standard addresses the fundamental question of determining whether a material contains nanomaterials and whether those materials are engineered or naturally occurring. It serves as a critical resource for manufacturers, regulators, and testing laboratories navigating the complex landscape of nanomaterial regulations worldwide.
The standard recognizes that different regulatory frameworks (EU REACH, US EPA, China MIIT) define nanomaterials differently – often based on size thresholds, volume fraction, or specific surface area. ISO/TS 27106 provides detection strategies aligned with these diverse definitions, enabling consistent and defensible compliance determinations. The guidance is particularly valuable for companies exporting products across multiple jurisdictions, where differing definitions may mean a product classified as containing nanomaterials in one region may not be subject to the same requirements elsewhere.
ISO/TS 27106:2013 establishes a structured decision framework for nanomaterial detection that guides the user from sample collection through final determination:
| Stage | Activity | Key Tools | Decision Point |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Sample Collection | Obtain representative sample | Sampling protocols, chain of custody | Sample integrity verified |
| 2. Physical Characterization | Size distribution analysis | SEM, TEM, AFM, DLS, CLS | Particles less than 100 nm detected? |
| 3. Chemical Analysis | Elemental and molecular composition | EDS, XPS, ICP-MS, Raman | Composition matches ENM? |
| 4. Surface Property Assessment | Surface chemistry and coatings | XPS, ToF-SIMS, FTIR | Engineered surface present? |
| 5. Final Determination | Integrate all evidence | Statistical analysis, reporting | Nanomaterial confirmed? |
The framework emphasizes weight-of-evidence approaches, recognizing that no single technique can definitively confirm the presence of engineered nanomaterials in all sample types. Multiple complementary measurements are typically required.
A critical engineering insight from ISO/TS 27106:2013 is the importance of understanding the regulatory definition context before selecting detection methods. For example, the EU recommendation defines a nanomaterial as containing 50% or more of particles with at least one dimension between 1-100 nm. This requires number-based size distribution data, which electron microscopy can provide but ensemble techniques like DLS cannot. Selecting the wrong technique can lead to incorrect regulatory determinations even if the measurement itself is technically accurate.
Detection of nanomaterials in complex matrices – such as food, cosmetics, or environmental samples – presents additional challenges. Matrix components may interfere with measurement signals, particle extraction efficiency may be incomplete, and matrix-induced agglomeration can alter the apparent size distribution. The standard provides guidance on matrix-specific sample preparation protocols and recommends spiking experiments to validate detection efficiency for each unique matrix type.