David
Speed
a,
Paul
Westerhoff
*b,
Reyes
Sierra-Alvarez
c,
Rockford
Draper
d,
Paul
Pantano
d,
Shyam
Aravamudhan
e,
Kai Loon
Chen
f,
Kiril
Hristovski
b,
Pierre
Herckes
b,
Xiangyu
Bi
b,
Yu
Yang
b,
Chao
Zeng
c,
Lila
Otero-Gonzalez
c,
Carole
Mikoryak
d,
Blake A.
Wilson
d,
Karshak
Kosaraju
e,
Mubin
Tarannum
e,
Steven
Crawford
e,
Peng
Yi‡
f,
Xitong
Liu
f,
S. V.
Babu
g,
Mansour
Moinpour
h,
James
Ranville
i,
Manuel
Montano
i,
Charlie
Corredor
j,
Jonathan
Posner
j and
Farhang
Shadman
c
aIBM Microelectronics, Systems and Technology Group, Hopewell Jct., NY, USA
bArizona State University, School of Sustainable Engineering & The Built Environment, PO Box 873005, Tempe, AZ 85287-3005, USA. E-mail: p.westerhoff@asu.edu; Tel: +480 965 2885
cUniversity of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA
dUniversity of Texas at Dallas, Richardson, TX, USA
eNorth Carolina A&T State University, Greensboro, North Carolina, USA
fJohns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA
gClarkson University, Potsdam, NY, USA
hIntel Corporation, Santa Clara, CA, USA
iColorado School of Mines, Golden, CO, USA
jUniversity of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA
First published on 14th May 2015
This tutorial review focuses on aqueous slurries of dispersed engineered nanoparticles (ENPs) used in chemical mechanical planarization (CMP) for polishing wafers during manufacturing of semiconductors. A research consortium was assembled to procure and conduct physical, chemical, and in vitro toxicity characterization of four ENPs used in CMP. Based on input from experts in semiconductor manufacturing, slurries containing fumed silica (f-SiO2), colloidal silica (c-SiO2), ceria (CeO2), and alumina (Al2O3) were selected and subsequently obtained from a commercial CMP vendor to represent realistic ENPs in simplified CMP fluids absent of proprietary stabilizers, oxidants, or other chemical additives that are known to be toxic. ENPs were stable in suspension for months, had highly positive or negative zeta potentials at their slurry working pH, and had mean diameters measured by dynamic light scattering (DLS) of 46 ± 1 nm for c-SiO2, 148 ± 5 nm for f-SiO2, 132 ± 1 nm for CeO2, and 129 ± 2 nm for Al2O3, all of which were larger than the sub 100 nm diameter primary particle sizes measured by electron microscopy. The concentration of ENPs in all four slurries that caused 50% inhibition (IC-50) was greater than 1 mg mL−1 based on in vitro assays using bioluminescence of the bacterium Aliivibrio fischeri and the proliferation, viability, and integrity of human cells (adenocarcinomic human alveolar basal epithelial cell line A549). The general practice in the CMP industry is to dilute the slurry waste stream so actual abrasive concentrations are typically orders of magnitude smaller than 1 mg mL−1, which is lower than IC-50 levels. In contrast to recent reports, we observed similar toxicological characteristics between c-SiO2 and f-SiO2, and the materials exhibited similar X-ray diffraction (XRD) spectra but different morphology observed using electron microscopy. The ENPs and CMP slurries used in this study have been made available to a number of other research groups, and it is the intention of the consortium for this paper to provide a basis for characterizing and understanding human and environmental exposures for this important class of industrial ENPs.
Nano impactThe manuscript represents the efforts of an academic-industry consortium aiming to characterize the physical-chemical and biological attributes of a major class of engineered nanomaterials (CMP slurries). Results include intra-laboratory comparisons of measurements, multiple independent measurements of particle sizes and multiple, complimentary assays to assess human cell and bacterial response to nanomaterials. The results are compared with other reported measurements, and put into a life cycle perspective that aims to understand both exposure and hazards. The conclusion is that CMP nanoparticles pose relatively low risk based upon our current understanding, but that biological effect differences between fumed and colloidal silica continue to be unresolved when considering the available physical chemical data. |
Alumina (Al2O3), ceria (CeO2), and silica (SiO2) represent an important class of ENPs.1 One principal use of Al2O3, CeO2, and amorphous SiO2 nanoparticles is chemical mechanical planarization (CMP) where particles in the form of abrasive slurries are used to polish wafers when fabricating integrated circuits in the semiconductor industry.17,18 In this application, the ENPs are used to manufacture the product (semiconductor chips), but are not incorporated into the product. CMP nanoparticles constituted nearly 60% of the total $1 billion worldwide market for nano-powders in 2005.19,20
Although Al2O3, CeO2, and amorphous SiO2 ENP are generally believed to be relatively innocuous, toxicity evaluations that have been conducted on these materials, vary depending on the particular aspects of the particles being assessed (e.g., particle size, physiochemical properties, and dispersion state) as well as the particular toxicity assessment method being utilized (e.g., dose, cell lines, exposure protocols, and assay end points).2,3 Likewise, there is some uncertainty regarding the behavior and fate of these ENP in wastewater treatment processes. For instance, the removal of CeO2, SiO2, and Al2O3 nanopartcles (NPs) during biological wastewater treatment has received some research attention,8–14 but less information exists on ENP removal in the type of physical-chemical treatment processes that are often employed as on-site industrial wastewater treatment. The available literature indicates that Al2O3 and CeO2, but not necessarily SiO2, are typically removed well by conventional biological wastewater treatment processes. ENPs removed from the wastewater accumulate in biosolids and precipitated sludges, where their fate and ultimate stability are important considerations when determining the environmental effects of these ENPs. Moreover, naturally occurring Al2O3 and SiO2 NPs are believed to be common in natural water systems, where their fate intertwined with a variety of geological and biological processes.15,16 An understanding of the background concentrations and geochemical processes that govern the occurrence and behavior of these naturally occurring NPs, and how biota respond to them, is needed to provide context for interpreting the impacts of ENP wastewater discharges and determining appropriate discharge levels. In light of these information gaps, we have pursued a multi-university collaborative research effort, the initial stages of which have centered on developing and validating basic characterization methods for Al2O3, CeO2, and amorphous SiO2.
This tutorial review aims to characterize ENPs in model CMP suspensions, to understand the ramifications of ENP properties on potential exposure and toxicity to environmental systems and humans, and to discuss research needs associated with the next generation of semiconductor manufacturing. Four model CMP fluids, each being the simplest formulation to generate a stable suspension of ENPs, were obtained from a major commercial slurry manufacturer. These slurries were thoroughly characterized via physical-chemical means, including intra-laboratory comparisons of nano-measurements. Large volumes of these model CMP suspensions were procured and have been made available to several investigators that study workplace exposure, human and ecosystem toxicity, industrial treatment efficiencies, sewer discharge and wastewater treatment removal, fate and transport, and fundamental aspects of the nano-bio interface. In vitro assays were conducted using different cell lines to compare the relative toxicity of ENPs used in CMP. Finally, a discussion identifies potential scenarios for workplace exposure and flux of ENPs from CMP processes into the sewer system.
CMP fluids remove materials by a combination of chemical and mechanical (or abrasive) actions to achieve highly smooth and planar material surfaces. CMP, which can be used to planarize a variety of materials including dielectrics, semiconductors, metals, polymers, and composites, is one of the most important semiconductor processes for achieving the performance goals of modern microprocessor and memory chips.21,22Fig. 1 shows a typical CMP operation scheme where a robotic arm loads a semiconductor wafer onto a rotating plate, a quantity of CMP slurry is dispensed, and a pad is engaged in a polishing action that uses the slurry to planarize the wafer surface. The polishing step is followed by additional automated rinse and pad cleaning steps. Following the CMP operation, the height of the wafer surface is typically uniform to within ±1 nm, or less. Because even the smallest scratch or surface imperfection can ruin the geometry of the integrated circuit being fabricated into a wafer, CMP slurries are typically crafted with highly controlled particle size distributions, along with additives, as described below.
The inorganic oxide abrasive particles are an important constituent for CMP slurries, with the three most commonly used abrasive particles being Al2O3, amorphous SiO2, and CeO2.17,23 Depending on the particular application, particle size in CMP slurries can vary from 20 to 200 nm, and trends are toward CMP particles <100 nm in size to achieve highly polished surfaces.23,24 In a given slurry formulation, these particles usually have a uniform shape and size.
Amorphous SiO2 can be distinguished as fumed silica (f-SiO2) and colloidal SiO2 (c-SiO2) based on the synthesis methods. f-SiO2 is formed in a pyrogenic process by oxidizing chlorosilane (SiCl4) at high temperature.25 c-SiO2 is formed in liquid phase by precipitating a Si precursor (e.g., Na2SiO3).26 A widely referenced method of synthesizing c-SiO2 that uses a tetraalkyl silicate as the Si precursor was presented by Stöber.27 CeO2 NPs used in CMP slurries have a crystalline structure, thus often yielding sharp edges, corners, and apexes.28 Al2O3 NPs used in CMP slurries can be α-Al2O3, β-Al2O3, δ-Al2O3, or fumed Al2O3.29 Al2O3 is softer than SiO2 or CeO2 and sometimes can be coated with a hard surface such as SiO2 to enhance semi-conductor polishing.23
In addition to the metal oxide NPs, CMP slurries may also contain a number of additives, such as pH adjustment agents, oxidizers, dispersants, complexing agents, surfactants, biocides, and corrosion inhibitors, as summarized in Table 2. For instance, one additive may serve to aid in the selective dissolution and solubilization of a material that is present at the wafer surface, and a second additive may serve to protect or inhibit the removal of a different material that is present on the exposed wafer surface during the CMP process. Likewise, surface active agents may be added to influence particle surface charge and help maintain a stable particle dispersion.
Component | Function | Examples |
---|---|---|
Abrasive particles | Polish surface | Al2O3, CeO2, amorphous SiO2 |
pH adjust | Adjust and buffer pH | HCl, KOH, HNO3, NH4OH, H3PO4, TMAH, NH4OH, buffers |
Complexing agents | Solubilize dissolved metals | Amino acids (glycine, etc.), carboxylic acids (citric acid, etc.) |
Oxidizers | Promote metal removal via oxidative dissolution | H2O2, Ferric nitrate, KIO4, KMnO4, etc. |
Corrosion inhibitors | Selectivity against removal of certain surfaces, corrosion inhibition | Benzotriazole (BTA), 3-amino-triazole |
Surface active organics | Maintain metal oxide particles in a dispersed state | Polyacrylic acid, polyethylene glycol polymer, cetyl trimethyl ammonium bromide, polyethylene cetyl ether |
High MW polymers | Flocculant and/or coat abrasives to “cushion” their abrasiveness | High MW polyethylene oxide |
Biocides | Prevent biological growth | Hydrogen peroxide and others |
In a manufacturing line, a combination of CMP slurries is fed to a fleet of CMP tools. In each tool, the wafers undergo the CMP process and are rinsed with deionized (DI) water, and further chemicals may be added to clean and/or recondition the wafer polishing pads. A typical wafer production step might involve applying between 0.2 and 0.8 L of CMP slurry, 1 to 2 L of rinse water, and another 5 or more liters of pad cleaner and rinse water. The total quantity of wastewater generated per wafer undergoing CMP polishing may be on the order of 10 or more liters. The effluent wastewater contains the original slurries, associated rinse waters, and dissolved and particulate material that is removed from the wafer during the CMP operation. The thickness of material removed from the wafer surface may vary from a few nanometers to 100 or more nanometers. If, for instance, a 100 nm blanket layer of Cu is removed from a 300 mm diameter wafer surface, 64 mg Cu/wafer would be added to the wastewater.
Detailed characterization of the compositional change that a CMP slurry undergoes throughout a given CMP process has not been reported in the literature. However, there are reports that the particle size distribution in CMP waste is typically broader than the particle size distribution of the virgin slurry,30,31 which is probably due to the release of small particles from the wafer surface, the formation of aggregates, or both.
Name | c-SiO2 | f-SiO2 | CeO2 | Al2O3 |
---|---|---|---|---|
a BDL = Below detection limit. b particles tended to coalesce, and primary particle size could not be determined. | ||||
Manufacturer reported | ||||
- Material | Colloidal SiO2 | Fumed SiO2 | CeO2 | Al2O3 |
- Composition | 3% SiO2 | 5% SiO2 | 1% CeO2 | 3% Al2O3 |
- Additive | <1% acetic acid | <1% KOH | none | <1% nitric acid |
- pH | 2.5–4.5 | 10 | 3–4 | 4.5–5.0 |
- Particle size (nm) | 50–60 | 120–140 | 60–100 | 80–100 |
Primary metal concentration | 27 g Si L−1 | 50 g Si L−1 | 9.6 g Ce L−1 | 29 g Al L−1 |
Dissolved organic carbon (DOC; mg L−1) | 320.5 ± 0.5 | 4.84 ± 0.03 | 1.90 ± 0.03 | 6.77 ± 0.18 |
Other additives | 801.9 ± 1.3 mg L−1 acetic acid | — | — | 134.7 ± 0.8 mg NO3− L−1 BDLa for nitrite |
Diameter by SEM (nm) | 37 ± 7 | 38 ± 14 | 43 ± 16 | 85 ± 21 |
Diameter by TEM (nm) | 36 ± 9 | NDb | 39 ± 19 | 38 ± 16 |
Mean diameter by DLS (nm) | 46 ± 0.2 | 148 ± 5.1 | 132 ± 0.1 | 129 ± 1.6 |
(Polydispersity index) | (0.08) | (0.11) | (0.16) | (0.11) |
Diameter by NTA (nm) | 61 ± 0.9 | 144 ± 1.8 | 79 ± 1.3 | 119 ± 1.1 |
Single particle ICP-MS (nm) | ND | 144 ± 26 | 60 ± 28 | 66 ± 23 |
Zeta potential at slurry pH (mV) | −21 | −50 | 43 | 55 |
Nanoparticle Tracking Analysis (NTA) was performed using a NanoSight LM10 instrument (NanoSight Ltd., Amesbury, United Kingdom) equipped with a 405 nm (blue) laser source, a temperature-controlled chamber, and a scientific CMOS camera (Hamamatsu). A video (30 s) of each sample was collected and analyzed using NTA 2.3 Build 011 software (NanoSight Ltd.). The concentration (particles per mL) was calculated as the average of three replicates.
Single particle ICP-MS (spICP-MS) is an emerging nano-analysis to size and quantify NPs in liquid matrices.34–36 An ICP-MS instrument (Perkin-Elmer NexION 300q) was placed in time-resolved analysis mode in which the signal was recorded every dwell time (integration time of one reading by the detector) of 10 ms. Thus, the detection of a particle gave a pulse signal. The sample flow rate was 0.6–0.7 mL min−1. Si,29140Ce, and27Al were used as the analyte isotopes for SiO2, CeO2, and Al2O3 NPs.
In order to differentiate elements associated with the CMP particles from elements dissolved in solution, supernatants after high-speed centrifugation or permeates of 30 kDA ultrafilters were analyzed (Fig. 3). Both preparation methods yielded very similar concentrations, thus validating their use in laboratories that may only have access to one method (Fig. 3). In general, the same elements detected in the digested, as-received slurry were also detectable in the NP-free solutions. In all cases, the concentrations of all detectable elements in the aqueous aliquots of the slurries were far below levels detected in the as-received digested slurry, and most trace elements were below 1000 μg L−1. This suggests that the NPs partially dissolved and released ionic forms of these elements. Whereas levels of zinc were high in some CMP slurry NPs (Fig. 2), they were much lower in free solution (Fig. 3). The as-received slurries were diluted many fold prior to toxicity testing (discussed in section 3.5), and the predicted effect of dissolved zinc was below levels of concern for toxicity. Elevated levels of potassium in the f-SiO2 slurry and supernatant were notable but expected because the slurry was adjusted to basic pH with KOH (Table 3).
Three of the slurries had low levels of dissolved organic carbon (1.9 to 6.7 mg L−1), but the c-SiO2 dispersion had much higher DOC (320 mg L−1) because high levels of acetic acid were present (~800 mg L−1) (Table 3). Nitrate was detected (135 mg NO3− L−1) in the Al2O3 slurry that contained nitric acid. Both the acetic acid and nitrate were associated with pH control agents added to adjust pH to levels where the NPs should be stable in suspension (discussed in section 3.4).
Fig. 5 shows FTIR analysis of the slurries. Broad stretching around 3000–3500 cm−1 is attributed to OH stretch from water, and the peak around 1650 cm−1 is attributed to CC stretching and indicates the presence of organic contaminants in the slurries. Colloidal and fumed SiO2 showed a band around 1120 cm−1 corresponding to asymmetric stretching vibration of Si–O–Si band41 in which the bridging oxygen atom moves parallel to the Si–Si lines in the opposite direction to their Si neighbors and a second band around ~470 cm−1 corresponding to Si–O rocking vibration where the oxygen atom moves perpendicular to the Si–O–Si plane. FTIR spectra for the other two slurries show Ce–O and Al–O stretching in the region of 500–750 cm−1.39,40
Differentiating forms of silica is important to the semiconductor industry which uses both fumed and colloidal silica for CMP operations. Fumed silica has been used since CMP processes were first developed in the 1980s and provides a comparatively inexpensive and rapid means of planarizing oxide surfaces. However, it is stable only at alkaline pH and generally provides a lower quality surface than colloidal silica, which became available in the 1990s. Fumed silica particles are normally multi-fractal, irregularly shaped with sharp edges and surfaces and is produced via high temperature combustion of SiCl4 with oxygen, whereas colloidal silica, made via a sol–gel process using either water glass (Na or K silicates) or tetramethoxysilane (TMOS) and tetraethoxysilane (TEOS), is available in the form of uniform spherical particles over a wide range of pH and size distributions and is generally used where a highly smooth surface is required. Despite very different uses by industry, it can be difficult to differentiate f-SiO2 from c-SiO2 using common solid-state characterization methods. However, literature incorporating nuclear magnetic resonance analysis suggests that the surface hydroxyl concentration and formation of bi-nuclear surface complexes with metals in solution reacting with the SiO2 surfaces (i.e., proximity of surface group) are perhaps more important than the morphological structure.42,43
Fig. 6 shows imaging and sizing results using electron microscopy. The c-SiO2 NPs are nearly spherical, compared with more angular and rectangular shaped CeO2 NPs. The f-SiO2 NPs appeared fused together to an extent not apparent with SiO2. The angular shape and non-spherical morphology of three of the four NPs was initially unexpected because CMP NPs are routinely described as nearly spherical polishing agents. However, the non-spherical nature of some CMP NPs influences their ability to scratch surfaces being polished.44 The Al2O3 NPs appeared to be aggregates of smaller primary particles having a broad range of diameters. Using both TEM and SEM images, the particle size distributions of the shortest dimension of the NPs were made (Fig. 6 and Table 3). The primary particles in the two SiO2 slurries were similar (30 to 40 nm),and were also similar to the CeO2 NPs. The broader range of primary particle sizes for the Al2O3 resulted in a larger mean diameter and larger size distribution than the other NPs. Differences between SEM and TEM analysis was low (Table 3), except for the Al2O3 NPs, which may have been associated with the modest number of primary particles counted given the large observed distribution in diameters.
The particle size distribution of slurries diluted approximately 10:1 with DI water was also analyzed by DLS in six separate laboratories, resulting in the following mean diameters: 46 ± 10 nm for c-SiO2, 137 ± 10 nm for CeO2, 141 ± 28 nm for Al2O3, and 158 ± 16 nm for f-SiO2. Statistically, there is little difference between the three larger NPs, but in all cases the order of mean sizes was consistent with c-SiO2 having the smallest diameter and Al2O3, CeO2, and f-SiO2 the largest and relatively similar diameter. Differences in absolute diameters may be attributed to six different operators and three instrument models that used different laser wavelengths (659, 488, 633 nm) and different scattering angles (90°, 90°, 173°). The hydrodynamic diameter of the CMP NPs was larger compared to the size determined for the primary particles by electron microscopy (Table 3). c-SiO2 was an exception, and the particle size determined with these two techniques was relatively similar. In contrast, the DLS sizing of the f-SiO2 resulted in an average size nearly 2–3 fold higher than determined for the primary NPs, reflective of the aggregated nature of the primary NPs into a dendritic morphology, and the hydrodynamic size of the CeO2 NPs was approximately two-fold higher compared to the primary particle size determined by electron microscopy (Table 3, Fig. 6).
The NTA trends in NP size from smallest to largerst were consistent with DLS measurements, with exception of CeO2, which was sized smaller by NTA (79 nm) than by DLS (132 nm). NTA analysis also determines particle number concentrations, which were (# particles/ × 1012 per mL): 4.7 ± 0.2 for c-SiO2, 13.0 ± 0.3 for f-SiO2, 3.9 ± 0.2 for CeO2, and 22.0 ± 1.1 for Al2O3.
An additional sizing method, spICP-MS, was also employed to evaluate the particle size distribution in the CMP slurries (Fig. 7). In this method, the cloud of ions generated from the ablation of a single particle is detected as a pulse above the background by utilizing short dwell times. Calculated mean diameters from spICP-MS analysis were 144 ± 26, 60 ± 28, and 66 ± 23 nm for f-SiO2, CeO2, and Al2O3, respectively. Limitations brought on by molecular interfering ions (e.g., dinitrogen) hindered the sizing of the SiO2 NPs below 100 nm and biased the diameter toward a larger mean size than actually present in the sample. The average particle sizes determined for f-SiO2 using spICP-MS, DLS, and NTA are very similar (Table 3). The size of c-SiO2 was below current spICP-MS detection limits for silica, indicating it has smaller diameter than f-SiO2, which is consistent with DLS, NTA, and SEM/TEM. Advances in micro-second dwell time ICP-MS technology and analysis may be capable of improving size resolution for c-SiO2 or other NPs with high background noise or poor detection resolution.45,46 Mean diameters for Al2O3 and CeO2 by spICP-MS were similar to each other and between electron microscopy methods and DLS or NTA results. The size distributions of NPs based upon spICP-MS lose some resolution relative to background below ~25 nm for Al2O3 and CeO2, which biases the mean to slightly larger sizes. The size ranges near the peak of the Gaussian distributions (Fig. 7) are in closer agreement with SEM/TEM results.
Fig. 7 Size distributions of Al2O3 (A), CeO2, (B), and f-SiO2 (C) CMP slurries by single particle ICP-MS. |
Few studies compare size measurements across as many techniques on the same number of different, well-dispersed NPs as present in these CMP slurries. Fig. 8 compares mean diameters reported by the manufacturer to those measured by the various techniques reported herein. Within any single evaluation technique, the size trends from smallest to largest are generally consistent, but significant differences in absolute size vary dramatically. This points to both the bias and assumptions of each technique (e.g., hydrated radius, mineral structure, density). Whereas DLS and NTA detect the hydrodynamic size, spICP-MS and SEM/TEM are not impacted by the hydrated nature of NPs and thus hydrodynamic state partially accounts for observed differences in mean diameters reported in Table 3 and shown in Fig. 8.
Fig. 8 Comparison of the average particle size values determined in this study for the various CMP slurries using different techniques with values reported by the slurry manufacturer. |
Fig. 9 Dynamic light scattering (bars) and zeta potential analysis (squares) of CMP slurries (ambient slurry pH). Polydispersity index (Pdi) values are shown for DLS data. |
Fig. 10 shows the electrophoretic mobilities (EPMs) of four CMP NPs as a function of pH. At pH higher than 2, the c-SiO2 and f-SiO2 were negatively charged, and the magnitude of surface charge generally increased with increasing pH. The f-SiO2 was almost neutral at pH 2, which is consistent with the reported pH of zero point of charge (pHZPC) of 2.0 for SiO2.47 The pHZPC of c-SiO2 was lower than 2. CeO2 and Al2O3 colloids were both positively charged at pH lower than 7.0, and their surface charges reversed when pH was elevated to 11. By extrapolation, the pHZPC for CeO2 and Al2O3 colloids were determined to be approximately 8 and 10, respectively, which are consistent with the reported pHZPC for CeO2 (8.1)48 and for Al2O3 (8.2–10).49
Fig. 10 EPMs of four CMP nanoparticles in 1 mM NaCl solutions prepared at different pH conditions. The error bars represent the standard deviation of triplicates. |
Assay | IC-50 (mg mL−1) | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
c-SiO2 | f-SiO2 | CeO2 | Al2O3 | |
a 37.6% inhibition at the highest concentration tested (1.3 mg mL−1). b No effect at highest concentration tested (1.1 mg mL−1). c Only 4.3% inhibition at the highest concentration tested (0.7 mg mL−1). d Only 28.4% inhibition at the highest concentration tested (1.3 mg mL−1). e Less than 10% inhibition at highest concentration tested (2 mg mL−1). f 0% inhibition at highest concentration tested (6 mg mL−1). g No effect at highest concentration tested (0.52 mg mL−1). h No effect at highest concentration tested (2.0 mg mL−1). | ||||
Bioluminescence of A. fischeri | NDa | NDb | NDc | NDd |
Proliferation of A549 cells | 3.8 ± 1.3 | 3.6 ± 0.2 | NDe | NDf |
Viability of A549 cells | 1.2 ± 0.2 | 1.5 ± 0.2 | NDg | NDh |
Integrity of A549 cells | 4.6 ± 0.2 | 3.1 ± 0.2 | NDg | NDh |
For the eukaryote toxicity tests with A549 cells, the IC-50 values for proliferation and plasma membrane integrity were in the range 1 to 4 mg mL−1 for both c-SiO2 and f-SiO2. The viability tests using MTT resulted in IC-50 values for both forms of SiO2 in the range of 1 to 2 mg mL−1. The CeO2 and Al2O3 had negligible effect in any of the A549 cell assays at the highest tested slurry concentrations. In both prokaryotic and eukaryotic cell assays, the CMP NPs were unstable and aggregated when in biological medium. This was especially pronounced for CeO2 and Al2O3.
With the prokaryote A. fischeri, none of the CMP metal oxides NPs resulted in as much as a 50% decrease in bioluminescence in the Microtox® assay after a 30 min exposure. Thus, CMP NPs do not appear to be very toxic to A. fischeri. However, there was a statistically significant reduction in bioluminescence from bacteria exposed to c-SiO2 and Al2O3 at 1.3 mg mL−1 for 30 min (37.6 and 28.4% inhibition, respectively). It is therefore likely that there could be more significant adverse effects at higher doses and longer exposure times. Literature results confirm the low toxicity of silica, ceria, and alumina NPs towards A. fischeri. No appreciable effects were observed in Microtox® assays supplemented with nominal concentrations of CeO2 and Al2O3 up to 0.1 mg mL−1.52,53 Similarly, amorphous SiO2 NPs of different diameters (50 and 100 nm) were not toxic to A. fischeri at a concentration as high as 1 mg mL−1.
There are many studies in the literature on the toxicity of SiO2 NPs towards various cultured mammalian cells with a wide range of toxicity values reported. Factors that influence silica NP toxicity include cell type, differences in the physical and surface properties of the NPs, and the type of toxicity assay.54–57 The IC-50 values reported here for the various assays with A549 cells (in the range of 1 to 4 mg mL−1 for a 24 hour exposure) are consistent with data in the literature. For example, Lin et al. (2006) observed at most a 17% reduction in viability after exposing A549 cells to 15 nm SiO2 NPs for 24 hours, and at 72 h exposure the viability was reduced by about half.58 Yu et al. (2011) reported no effect of c-SiO2 colloidal silica on A549 cells in a 24 h exposure up to the highest concentration tested of 0.5 mg mL−1.55 Yu et al. (2011) also reported that a murine macrophage cell line (RAW 264.7) responded to c-SiO2 with an IC-50 of ~200 μg mL−1, emphasizing that different cell types may respond differently to SiO2. Using the MTT assay and an impedance-based assay, Otero-Gonzalez et al. (2012) found IC-50 values in the range of 0.17–0.23 mg mL−1 with human bronchial epithelial cells (16HBE14o-) exposed to amorphous SiO2 for 48 h.59 Zhang et al. (2012) reported that f-SiO2 prepared by a high temperature process was significantly more toxic than c-SiO2 prepared by a low temperature process.56 They attributed the result to different surface chemistries generated by the different synthesis methods. Nevertheless, we observed little difference in the toxicity of colloidal and fumed SiO2 in a variety of assays with A549 cells.
The biological effects of CeO2 have been enigmatic because of reports that it is both an oxidant capable of generating reactive oxygen species (ROS) and an anti-oxidant capable of protecting cells from oxidants by consuming ROS.60 The different oxidation properties are attributed to the presence of both Ce(III) and Ce(IV) in NPs. Interpretation of the literature has been confusing because the same type of NP could seemingly be oxidizing or anti-oxidizing, toxic or non-toxic. Recent work from the Baer group has brought insight to the problem.61 CeO2 is usually made by one of three methods: high temperature heating (>300 °C), heated in a solvent (<100 °C), or prepared at room temperature. Karakoti et al. (2012) grouped biological responses to CeO2 in the literature according to synthesis method and noticed that most (but not all) of the CeO2 made by the high temperature or high temperature in solvent methods were either pro-oxidative or had both oxidative and anti-oxidative properties as reported in the various assays used in papers.61 CeO2 made at room temperature was, with one exception, anti-oxidative. This analysis is another example demonstrating that the method of nanoparticle synthesis can have a large influence on its properties and biological effects. However, the CMP CeO2 NPs we examined had no measureable toxicity in our A549 assays up to the highest concentrations tested.
As with many nanomaterials, there is a diversity of literature and opinions on whether Al2O3 NPs are toxic. For example, nano-Al2O3 at 100 to 1000 mg L−1 was toxic to cultured human brain microvascular endothelial cells and also reduced tight junctions in brain endothelial cells in cerebral vasculature after infusion into rats.62 Al2O3 NPs were at least mildly toxic to osteoblast-like UMR 106 cells using assays of mitochondrial and lysosome function,63 and they were cytotoxic and genotoxic with CHO-K1 cells.64 Otero-Gonzalez et al. (2012) observed that exposing human bronchial epithelial cells (16HBE14o-) to 1 mg mL−1 of nano-Al2O3 (<50 nm) for 48 h resulted in 50% inhibition in the MTT assay.59 In the same study, the IC-50 value determined for nano-Al2O3 using an impedance-based real-time cell analyzer was 0.3 mg mL−1. In recent work, Al2O3 NPs were reported toxic to plant cells in culture and toxic to fresh water algae.65,66 In contrast, Al2O3 NPs had no measurable toxicity with mouse L929 cells and normal human fibroblasts.67 Moreover, even at high concentrations, nano-Al2O3 did not affect the phagocytic activity of rat alveolar macrophages.68 Our results with Al2O3 CMP slurry failed to find any toxic response with A549 cells in three different types of assays.
Toxicity data developed herein for f-SiO2 and c-SiO2, Al2O3, and CeO2 were integrated with human and other organisms. These data are summarized along with corresponding IC-50 and the half maximal effective concentration (EC-50) data reported in the literature in Fig. 11 and 12. The IC/EC-50 concentrations for silica are higher than for alumina, which in turn is higher than for ceria. This is good because it is in reverse order of their prevalence and use in most semiconductor fabrication facilities (fabs). Silica, which is used in most abundance, generally has the highest IC/EC-50 values and is therefore least toxic. It is evident that for a given material type, there is considerable variation among the IC/EC-50 data, depending upon the particular test type, cell line or test organism, test duration, and test endpoint.
Fig. 12 Human cytotoxicity findings for three major classes of metal-based nanoparticles used in CMP slurries. Legends: Data for CeO2 (■), Al2O3 (□), and SiO2 (). The asterisk (*) indicates data obtained in this study.76–85 |
There are also significant differences between fabs in the manner that CMP wastewater is routed through the fab and treated. Some, like the fab described in ESI,† employ a physical-chemical wastewater treatment system for the composite CMP water, followed by dilution and equalization with other on-site wastewater flows before treatment by an on-site biological wastewater system. For this particular fab, the waste streams that represent potential gateways for releasing Al2O3, CeO2, and SiO2 ENPs to the environment are the solids concentrate produced by the CMP wastewater treatment process and/or discharges from municipal wastewater treatment plants that receive sewer discharges from the fab. In this fab, the on-site industrial CMP wastewater treatment process produces a filter cake with a 52% water content and measured SiO2 and Al2O3 concentrations of 77 and 8 wt%, respectively. Although this particular filter cake was recycled for the production of cement, it demonstrates the importance of evaluating the fate and long term stability of the solids concentrate waste streams from on-site CMP wastewater treatment processes as the ENP composition of waste sludges may range from less than 1 wt% to greater than 75 wt%. The treated effluent from municipal biological wastewater treatments is typically discharged to surface waters, and the waste sewage sludges or biosolds disposed as land soil amendments (~60%), landfills (~20%), or incinerated with ash being landfilled (~20%).69 SEM analysis of ENPs at the influent and effluent of on-site chemical wastewater treatment processes at a fab (see SI) indicate the presence of SiO2 ENPs. While both locations have ENPs approximately 70 nm in size, the effluent SiO2 NPs appear to have slightly different surface morphologies. Overall, the results and analytical methods herein with the four CMP slurries can be applied to effluent streams in fabs to determine ENP behavior and fate. Ideally, speciated and size fractionated ENP concentration data are available for the influent, effluent, and waste biosolids, such that a materials balance account can be made across wastewater treatment facilities.
Analytical method development is relevant not only for assessing the fate of ENPs, but also for determining their impact on biological processes (industrial on-site or off-site municipal facilities). For instance, Zheng et al. (2012) reported 35% inhibition of N removal efficiency at 50 mg L−1 of 80 nm SiO2.70 Others observed a 37% inhibition of O2 uptake rate for 50 mg L−1 of 50 nm SiO2.71 Details for a particular fab with on-site chemical and biological treatment are provided in ESI.† The mass balance indicates 2 mg L−1 of SiO2 influent to the on-site treatment facility and 0.2 mg L−1 in the effluent from the biological wastewater treatment step. Thus, the biological treatment is important in reducing ENP levels. If a fab doesn't pre-treat waste streams in the fab or have extensive dilution with other on-site wastewater flows, its potential ENP influent concentrations to the biological treatment process could be several tens of mg L−1 or greater, which may inhibit the performance of the biological wastewater treatment process.
Cytotoxicity using prokaryotic and eukaryotic toxicity assays showed a low inhibitory potential of the four ENPs in the CMP slurries. The concentrations of ENPs in all four slurries causing 50% inhibition (IC-50) were greater than 1 mg mL−1 based upon in vitro assays using bioluminescence of the bacterium Aliivibrio fischeri and proliferation and viability or integrity of human cells (adenocarcinomic human alveolar basal epithelial cell line A549). Based on these IC-50 values, none of these model slurry dispersions showed acute toxicity in assays performed. In contrast with some previous reports, f-SiO2 was not significantly more toxic than c-SiO2 in the CMP slurries, despite having different sizes and morphologies but similar characterization by FTIR and XRD. Additional characterization techniques that probe surface reactivity or number and proximity of surface hydroxyl groups are needed to improve our understanding of discrepancies in the literature. Otherwise, the levels of toxicity of the ENPs towards human cells or model aquatic organisms were similar to literature reports and suggest monitoring at mg L−1 levels would be adequate to meet IC-50 levels. IC-50 values (>1000 mg L−1) are much higher than ENP concentrations expected in semiconductor effluents,. It should be noted that the general practice in the CMP industry is to dilute the slurry waste stream so actual abrasive concentrations are typically orders of magnitude smaller than 1 mg mL−1, which is lower than IC-50 levels.
Among the most interesting observations was the ability of the CMP slurry manufacturer to produce 1 to >5 wt% ENPs that have remained dispersed in solution for many months (i.e., stable; no aggregation). The special-order slurries did not contain organic surfactants, and we demonstrated through comprehensive analysis of the solution that there were no added stabilizers other than pH adjustment. The slurry manufacturers were able to disperse the ENPs using mechanical, sound, or other non-chemical means and then maintain a very highly negative (less than −20 mV for c- and f-SiO2) or very highly positive (greater than +40 mV for Al2O3 and CeO2) zeta potential through pH adjustment.
The size, morphology, and composition of the ENPs in the CMP slurries differed. Size measurements by TEM, SEM, and spICP-MS agreed well and were smaller than measurements by DLS and NTA, which accounted for the hydrodynamic influence of the nanoparticles. There was excellent agreement among multiple laboratories performing DLS measurements on the well-dispersed ENPs. f-SiO2 ENPs contained small primary particles agglomerated together into dendritic structures whereas the c-SiO2 ENPs were present as small and usually singular (non-agglomerated) particles, indicating that the synthesis method impacts the morphology more than structural properties measured by FTIR, XRD, or XPS. CeO2 ENPs were cubic shaped and generally not-agglomerated whereas Al2O3 nanoparticles contained a wide range of primary particle sizes and were agglomerated together. Elemental analysis of the ENPs (Fig. 2) revealed the presence of trace constituents that, while representing low weight percentages of the nanoparticles, might influence their reactivity and or ability to be traced in the environment. Such elemental data has not been reported for other nanoparticles, and the presence of some metals may be related to the purity of silica, ceria, or alumina used in bulk by the CMP slurry manufacturer, compared against high grade purity levels typically used in laboratory studies that synthesize nanoparticles for specific research applications. Unrelated observations, yet similar conclusions, have been reported when yttrium and other trace metals were reported in carbon nanotubes.72 Additional research is needed to understand the implications of differences in stock reagent purity on nanoparticle properties as production of ENPs scales up.
Footnotes |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available: Supplementary information includes some analytical methods and in-depth discussion of ENP fate during on-site industrial wastewater treatment. See DOI: 10.1039/c5en00046g |
‡ Current address: Department of Civil, Environmental and Geomatics Engineering, Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, Florida 33431, USA. |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2015 |