NANO PRODUCTS INVENTORY
The Project on Emerging Nanotechnologies, a Washington D.C.-based partnership between the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars and Pew Charitable Trusts, has developed an online inventory of more than 1,000 consumer products sold today that contain nanomaterials.
These products range from tennis rackets to sunscreen lotions, socks, shirts, makeup, plasma TV screens, flash drives and canola oil. To view the inventory, go to www.nanotechproject.org/inventories/consumer/browse.
More from Star Tribune
More from Star Tribune
More from Star Tribune
More from Star Tribune
More from Star Tribune
More from Star Tribune
More from Star Tribune
More From Star Tribune
More From Business
Business
Owner of exploding Michigan building arrested at airport while trying to leave US, authorities say
The owner of a suburban Detroit business that caught fire and exploded, killing a man, was arrested at a New York airport as he was preparing to depart for Hong Kong on a one-way ticket, authorities said Friday.
Business
Online retailer Shein is latest to face strict European Union digital regulations
Online fast-fashion retailer Shein must face the European Union's strictest level of digital regulations, the bloc said on Friday as it added the company to its list of big platforms that need extra scrutiny.
Business
US Silica agrees to go private in $1.85 billion acquisition by Apollo Global
U.S. Silica has agreed to go private in an all-cash acquisition by Apollo Global Management that values the industrial minerals company at about $1.85 billion.
Business
The protests over the Israel-Hamas war put a spotlight on college endowments
''Divest from death'' read the bubble letters written in chalk on the sidewalk on Tuesday outside of The New School in New York City.
Business
US probes whether Tesla Autopilot recall did enough to make sure drivers pay attention
The U.S. government's auto safety agency is investigating whether last year's recall of Tesla's Autopilot driving system did enough to make sure drivers pay attention to the road.