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ISO/TS 27687:2008, “Nanotechnologies — Terminology and definitions for nano-objects — Nanoparticle, nanofibre and nanoplate,” provides the foundational vocabulary for the field of nanotechnology. Published as a Technical Specification, it establishes unambiguous definitions for core nano-object classifications that underpin research, commercialization, and regulatory frameworks worldwide. The document was later revised and incorporated into ISO/TS 80004-2, but its original classification schema remains the de facto reference for nanotechnology terminology in academic publications, patent applications, and regulatory submissions. The standard was developed by ISO/TC 229 (Nanotechnologies) and represents a critical early effort to bring terminological order to a rapidly evolving scientific field where inconsistent language was impeding progress.
The specification defines a hierarchical terminology system beginning with the broad term “nano-object” — a material with one, two, or three external dimensions in the size range from approximately 1 nm to 100 nm. Below this umbrella term, the specification systematically classifies nano-objects by their number of nanoscale dimensions: nanoparticles (three external nanoscale dimensions), nanofibers (two external nanoscale dimensions), and nanoplates (one external nanoscale dimension). Each category is further subdivided by morphology, aspect ratio, and internal structure. For instance, nanofibers are divided into nanotubes (hollow),nanorods (solid, aspect ratio 3-20), and nanowires (solid, electrically conductive). This hierarchical approach is essential because the physical properties and biological interactions of nanomaterials are governed as much by their shape as by their chemical composition.
The scope of the specification extends beyond simple definitions to include guidance on how to apply the terminology in different contexts. It provides decision trees for classifying unknown nano-objects based on microscopy or scattering data, rules for naming composite or coated nano-objects, and conventions for reporting size distributions that account for the polydispersity inherent in nanomaterial samples. These practical elements make the standard useful not only for lexicographers but also for laboratory scientists and quality control engineers who need to apply the terminology correctly in their daily work.
The classification hierarchy established by ISO/TS 27687:2008 is critical because the physical, chemical, and biological properties of nanomaterials are strongly dependent on their shape and size distribution. For example, the toxicological profile of a nanoparticle differs markedly from that of a nanofiber of the same material composition, due to differences in surface area-to-volume ratio, cellular uptake mechanisms, and clearance pathways. The aspect ratio (length divided by width) is particularly important for nanofibers — materials with aspect ratios above 100:1, such as certain multi-walled carbon nanotubes, behave very differently in biological systems than those with lower aspect ratios.
| Term | Definition | Nanoscale Dimensions | Example Applications |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nano-object | Material with one or more external dimensions in the nanoscale (1 nm to 100 nm) | 1, 2, or 3 | Parent category for all nanoscale entities |
| Nanoparticle | Nano-object with all three external dimensions in the nanoscale | 3 | Drug delivery vehicles, quantum dots for displays, catalytic nanoparticles |
| Nanofibre | Nano-object with two external dimensions in the nanoscale | 2 | Carbon nanotube composites, cellulose nanofibrils for packaging |
| Nanoplate | Nano-object with one external dimension in the nanoscale | 1 | Graphene electronics, clay nanoplates for barrier films |
| Nanotube | Hollow nanofibre with open or closed ends | 2 | Single-wall and multi-wall carbon nanotubes, boron nitride nanotubes |
| Nanowire | Electrically conducting nanofibre | 2 | Silver nanowire transparent electrodes, silicon nanowire sensors |
| Nanopore | Pore with nanoscale dimensions | N/A | DNA sequencing membranes, molecular sieves |
| Nanostructured material | Material with internal or surface nanostructure | Varies | Nanocrystalline metals, photonic crystals |
The precise definitions in ISO/TS 27687:2008 have far-reaching implications beyond academic taxonomy. In regulatory contexts — such as the EU’s REACH regulations for chemical registration, the FDA’s guidance on nanomaterial-containing products, and the OECD’s testing guidelines for manufactured nanomaterials — the definitions determine which materials fall under regulatory scrutiny and what testing protocols apply. A material classified as a nanoparticle may require different ecotoxicity testing than one classified as a nanofibre, even if both are composed of the same base substance. The European Commission’s 2011 Recommendation on the definition of nanomaterials explicitly references the ISO/TS 27687 framework, and subsequent regulatory developments in the EU, US, and other jurisdictions continue to build upon its classification principles.
From a metrology perspective, the specification’s requirement that dimensions be measured in the range of 1 nm to 100 nm imposes stringent demands on measurement instrumentation. Techniques such as transmission electron microscopy (TEM), scanning electron microscopy (SEM), dynamic light scattering (DLS), and atomic force microscopy (AFM) must be carefully calibrated and cross-validated to ensure that reported dimensions are accurate and traceable to international measurement standards. The specification also emphasizes that agglomeration and aggregation states must be reported alongside primary particle dimensions, as these dramatically affect the effective size distribution and, consequently, the correct terminological classification. A material that is nanoparticle-grade in its primary form may behave as a microparticle in its agglomerated state — both dimensions should be reported following the standard’s conventions.