Publications by authors named "Shinita M Jordan"

Article Synopsis
  • UV light can increase the toxicity of some insensitive munitions (IMs), particularly in aquatic organisms, raising environmental concerns.
  • The study focused on the Army's IM formulation IMX-101, which includes three components (DNAN, NTO, and NQ) and found that UV-degraded forms of NTO and NQ had significantly higher mortality rates in Daphnia pulex than their original forms.
  • UV-degraded NQ was determined to be the primary driver of toxicity, with specific degradation products like nitrite and cyanide being major contributors, but overall toxicity may also be influenced by unidentified products or synergistic effects among the degradation products.
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Insensitive munitions (IMs) improve soldier safety by decreasing sympathetic detonation during training and use in theatre. IMs are being increasingly deployed, although the environmental effects of IM constituents such as nitroguanidine (NQ) and IM mixture formulations such as IMX-101 remain largely unknown. In the present study, we investigated the acute (96h) toxicity of NQ and IMX-101 to zebrafish larvae (21d post-fertilization), both in the parent materials and after the materials had been irradiated with environmentally-relevant levels of ultraviolet (UV) light.

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Insensitive munitions are desirable alternatives to historically used formulations, such as 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene (TNT), because of their so-called insensitivity to unintended detonation. The insensitive munition IMX-101 is a mixture of 2,4-dinitroanisole (DNAN), 3-nitro-1,2,4-triazol-5-one (NTO), and nitroguanidine (NQ). Environmental releases of munitions may be from production wastewaters or training; these munitions may be exposed to ultraviolet (UV) light.

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Engineered nanomaterials (ENMs) are being incorporated into a variety of consumer products due to unique properties that offer a variety of advantages over bulk materials. Understanding of the nano-specific risk associated with nano-enabled technologies, however, continues to lag behind research and development, registration with regulators, and commercialization. One example of a nano-enabled technology is nanosilver ink, which can be used in commercial ink-jet printers for the development of low-cost printable electronics.

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