• About Smithsonian
  • Email Updates
  • Member Services
  • Shop
  • Archive

Smithsonian.com

  • Smithsonian Institution
  • Smithsonian Channel
  • goSmithsonian
  • Air & Space magazine
  • Home
  • History & Archaeology
  • People & Places
  • Science & Nature
  • Arts & Culture
  • Travel
  • Photos & Videos
  • Subscribe
Toxic TCE is now simply filtered out of ground water, meaning “you’ve just moved it from one place to another,” says Wong (amid a projected illustration of nanoparticles). His detergent, however, breaks the pollutant down into “happy byproducts.”

Will Van Overbeek

  • Innovators

Midas Touch

To clean highly polluted groundwater, Michael Wong has developed a detergent based on gold

  • By William Booth
  • Smithsonian magazine, October 2007

Article Tools

 
  • Font
  • Email
  •  
  • Print
  • Comments
  •  
  • RSS
  •  

    The Last Word

    Smithsonian.com

    A quick questionnaire with Michael Wong

    Join the Discussion

    Smithsonian.com

    Interact with America's Young Innovators. This week, astrophysicist Lisa Kaltenegger asks, "Are we alone?"

    Related Links

    America's Young Innovators

    Most Popular

    • Viewed
    • Emailed
    1. Invasion of the Cassowaries
    2. New Light on Stonehenge
    3. The 'Secret Jews' of San Luis Valley
    4. Tattoos
    5. Inside Iran's Fury
    6. A Brief History of the Salem Witch Trials
    7. On California’s Coast, Farewell to the King Salmon
    8. Who's Laughing Now?
    9. The Woman Behind Miss Piggy
    10. Bernini's Genius
    1. Invasion of the Cassowaries
    2. The 'Secret Jews' of San Luis Valley
    3. Inside Iran's Fury
    4. New Light on Stonehenge
    5. Abraham Lincoln: a Man of His Words
    6. Eastern State Penitentiary: A Prison With a Past
    7. The Million Word March
    8. Bernini's Genius
    9. On California’s Coast, Farewell to the King Salmon
    10. Tattoos

    "I admit it does sound crazy," says Michael Wong of his idea to use gold to clean up toxic waste. Wong plans to combine gold with palladium—an even more precious metal—to treat polluted groundwater beneath waste dumps and contaminated factories and military sites. "It not only works faster [than current methods], but a hundred times faster," Wong says, "and I bet it will be cheaper too."

    A golden detergent? Here is Wong's trick: he creates nanoparticles of gold. In his realm, the work product is measured not in carats but in atoms. A thimbleful of coffee-colored solution contains 100 trillion gold spheres—each only 15 atoms wide, or about the width of a virus. Upon every golden nanosphere, Wong and his team dust a dash of palladium atoms. Think of an infinitely small ice-cream scoop flecked with sprinkles.

    The 35-year-old Caltech and MIT graduate says he had not given toxic waste much thought until three years ago when one of his colleagues at Rice University (where he is a recently tenured professor of chemical engineering) came to him and said, "I have a problem," meaning something interesting to work on.

    The problem concerned the suspected carcinogen trichloroethene, or TCE, "one of the most ubiquitous pollutants out there," says Wong, and "a really nasty molecule." The clear, sweet-smelling solvent has been used for decades to degrease metal parts in factories and government facilities. "It's everywhere," Wong adds. "We used TCE in our own labs." NASA assembly plants are contaminated with it, as are some of the most advanced research laboratories in the nation. The Environmental Protection Agency says 60 percent of Superfund cleanup sites harbor TCE; the Department of Defense says 1,400 of its facilities do. Estimated cleanup costs run to $5 billion just for the Defense sites.

    TCE lingers like a bad houseguest, especially if handled carelessly. It accumulates in soil and can persist for years in groundwater. In a report last year, the National Research Council found that TCE was a potential cause of kidney cancer; it's also associated with liver problems, autoimmune disease and impaired neurological function.

    Currently, the most common method of removing TCE from groundwater is to "pump and treat," Wong says—to pump the water out of the ground and run it through a filter made of activated carbon. ("Think of it as a big Brita water filter," he says.) The carbon grains soak up TCE like a sponge, but the process leaves behind TCE-laden filters that have to be stored or burned. "So you haven't really gotten rid of anything," Wong says. "You've just moved it from one place to another."

    This is where Wong comes in. He began thinking about using nanoparticles as a catalyst to react with the TCE and break it down into what he calls "happy byproducts."

    From the scientific literature, Wong knew that palladium had shown some promise at deconstructing TCE. "Palladium works OK, but it didn't work hard enough," Wong says. So he and his team began trying

    various recipes, and after six months reached a eureka moment when they sculpted a palladium-covered core of gold atoms.

    "We didn't believe it at first, because the gold-palladium nanoparticles were just so much more efficient—like, a hundred times more efficient," he says. "You see, gold itself doesn't do anything to TCE." But something very interesting happens at the interface where gold, palladium and TCE meet.

    And just what is it? "We don't know!" says Wong. "We don't understand the chemistry. But we don't understand it in a good way," meaning he believes that his team will figure it out soon. "Our catalyst is doing something really goofy."

    Goofy it may be, but Wong's nanodetergent breaks TCE down into relatively harmless ethane and chloride salts. He and his team are now working with engineers to build a real-sized reactor to field-test the nanoparticles at a polluted site. They hope to be scrubbing TCE in about a year, and then they'll see whether they have the cost-efficient cleaner they seek.

    "It's very nice research," says Galen Stucky, a chemistry professor at the University of California at Santa Barbara, where Wong did his postdoctoral studies. "Mike is a very creative guy with good insights, and what he is doing is going to have a major impact on the much bigger issue of water and water purification over the next ten years."

    Wong was born in Quebec City, Quebec, and grew up in Sacramento, California, where his mother was an accountant and his father ran a restaurant. His father also owned a strip mall where a tenant's dry-cleaning business became contaminated with a chemical cousin of TCE. "My dad was freaked out," Wong recalls. "He got fined, since he owned the mall. He was legally responsible. He really got dinged [for tens of thousands of dollars in fines]. So my dad has a real interest in my work. He keeps telling me, ‘Hurry up, son!' "

    William Booth is a reporter for the Washington Post who is based in Los Angeles.

    "I admit it does sound crazy," says Michael Wong of his idea to use gold to clean up toxic waste. Wong plans to combine gold with palladium—an even more precious metal—to treat polluted groundwater beneath waste dumps and contaminated factories and military sites. "It not only works faster [than current methods], but a hundred times faster," Wong says, "and I bet it will be cheaper too."

    A golden detergent? Here is Wong's trick: he creates nanoparticles of gold. In his realm, the work product is measured not in carats but in atoms. A thimbleful of coffee-colored solution contains 100 trillion gold spheres—each only 15 atoms wide, or about the width of a virus. Upon every golden nanosphere, Wong and his team dust a dash of palladium atoms. Think of an infinitely small ice-cream scoop flecked with sprinkles.

    The 35-year-old Caltech and MIT graduate says he had not given toxic waste much thought until three years ago when one of his colleagues at Rice University (where he is a recently tenured professor of chemical engineering) came to him and said, "I have a problem," meaning something interesting to work on.

    The problem concerned the suspected carcinogen trichloroethene, or TCE, "one of the most ubiquitous pollutants out there," says Wong, and "a really nasty molecule." The clear, sweet-smelling solvent has been used for decades to degrease metal parts in factories and government facilities. "It's everywhere," Wong adds. "We used TCE in our own labs." NASA assembly plants are contaminated with it, as are some of the most advanced research laboratories in the nation. The Environmental Protection Agency says 60 percent of Superfund cleanup sites harbor TCE; the Department of Defense says 1,400 of its facilities do. Estimated cleanup costs run to $5 billion just for the Defense sites.

    TCE lingers like a bad houseguest, especially if handled carelessly. It accumulates in soil and can persist for years in groundwater. In a report last year, the National Research Council found that TCE was a potential cause of kidney cancer; it's also associated with liver problems, autoimmune disease and impaired neurological function.

    Currently, the most common method of removing TCE from groundwater is to "pump and treat," Wong says—to pump the water out of the ground and run it through a filter made of activated carbon. ("Think of it as a big Brita water filter," he says.) The carbon grains soak up TCE like a sponge, but the process leaves behind TCE-laden filters that have to be stored or burned. "So you haven't really gotten rid of anything," Wong says. "You've just moved it from one place to another."

    This is where Wong comes in. He began thinking about using nanoparticles as a catalyst to react with the TCE and break it down into what he calls "happy byproducts."

    From the scientific literature, Wong knew that palladium had shown some promise at deconstructing TCE. "Palladium works OK, but it didn't work hard enough," Wong says. So he and his team began trying

    various recipes, and after six months reached a eureka moment when they sculpted a palladium-covered core of gold atoms.

    "We didn't believe it at first, because the gold-palladium nanoparticles were just so much more efficient—like, a hundred times more efficient," he says. "You see, gold itself doesn't do anything to TCE." But something very interesting happens at the interface where gold, palladium and TCE meet.

    And just what is it? "We don't know!" says Wong. "We don't understand the chemistry. But we don't understand it in a good way," meaning he believes that his team will figure it out soon. "Our catalyst is doing something really goofy."

    Goofy it may be, but Wong's nanodetergent breaks TCE down into relatively harmless ethane and chloride salts. He and his team are now working with engineers to build a real-sized reactor to field-test the nanoparticles at a polluted site. They hope to be scrubbing TCE in about a year, and then they'll see whether they have the cost-efficient cleaner they seek.

    "It's very nice research," says Galen Stucky, a chemistry professor at the University of California at Santa Barbara, where Wong did his postdoctoral studies. "Mike is a very creative guy with good insights, and what he is doing is going to have a major impact on the much bigger issue of water and water purification over the next ten years."

    Wong was born in Quebec City, Quebec, and grew up in Sacramento, California, where his mother was an accountant and his father ran a restaurant. His father also owned a strip mall where a tenant's dry-cleaning business became contaminated with a chemical cousin of TCE. "My dad was freaked out," Wong recalls. "He got fined, since he owned the mall. He was legally responsible. He really got dinged [for tens of thousands of dollars in fines]. So my dad has a real interest in my work. He keeps telling me, ‘Hurry up, son!' "

    William Booth is a reporter for the Washington Post who is based in Los Angeles.


     
    Comments

    It is almost 2008. There must be another chemical to use instead of TCE. The United States needs to stop using TCE.

    Posted by James Klich on November 27,2007 | 02:44PM

    I would like to get more information from Mr. Wong on his research. Is there a way to contact him?

    Posted by Jean Young on November 29,2007 | 11:34AM

    He is at Rice University http://www.ruf.rice.edu/~che/

    Posted by Grant Johnston on November 29,2007 | 06:07PM

    RE: Mr. Wong's process - Could a nano picture be taken of the layer between the gold and the paladium and then a search made on line as if one were matching fingerprints to identify what's going on there? Is there such a search method? If not should there be?

    Posted by Margery Johnson on August 15,2008 | 11:57AM

    Post a Comment


    Name: (required)

    Email: (required)

    Comment:



    Advertisement

    Smithsonian Videos

    Fishermen's Fate

    In the town of Fort Bragg, California, fishermen scramble to make a living


    Coral Reefs and Creatures

    The Phoenix Islands provide an unspoiled center for marine science


    Inside the Photobooth

    Collector Nakki Goranin leads a tour of her collection


    Underwater Volcano

    A remote camera captures the first-ever video of an erupting underwater volcano


    Political Props

    Convention artifacts and other campaign memorabilia


    Advertisement

    Culturespotter

    Find Your Inspiration

    Discover people that are making a difference in today's world.

    Voyage to Melanesia

    Enter to win an extraordinary adventure to explore Vanuatu, the Solomon Islands and Papua New Guinea valued at over $25,000

    Louisiana Culture. Always Real. Always Here.

    Enjoy hundreds of cultural activities happening throughout the state

    Only in Mexico

    Discover the diverse cuisine, arts and music unique to this dynamic country.


    Cultured Collector

    Window Shopping

    Gifts, Gadgets and Great Finds!

    From Our Advertisers: Products, Offers and Free Info


    Travel & Adventure

    Subscribe Today & Win a FREE Trip to Paris!


    Sojourners

    In The Magazine

    October 2008

    • New Light on Stonehenge
    • The Secret of San Luis Valley
    • Inside Iran's Fury
    • The Last Doughboy
    • Bernini's Genius
    • Farewell to the King?

    View Table of Contents



    Enter Now!

    Smithsonian's 6th Annual Photo Contest

    Enter the Smithsonian magazine 6th annual photo contest now >>

    ECOCENTER

    Greener Living

    Celebrate Earth Day with Smithsonian.com



    View full archiveRecent Issues


    • Oct 2008


    • Sep 2008


    • Aug 2008

    Newsletter

    Sign up for regular email updates from Smithsonian magazine, including free newsletters, special offers and current news updates.

    Subscribe Now

    About Us

    Smithsonian.com expands on Smithsonian magazine's in-depth coverage of history, science, nature, the arts, travel, world culture and technology. Join us regularly as we take a dynamic and interactive approach to exploring modern and historic perspectives on the arts, sciences, nature, world culture and travel, including videos, blogs and a reader forum.

    Explore our Brands

    • goSmithsonian.com
    • Smithsonian Air & Space Museum
    • Smithsonian Institution
    • Smithsonian Catalogue
    • Smithsonian Journeys
    • Smithsonian Channel
    • Site Map
    • Privacy Policy
    • Copyright
    • About Smithsonian
    • Contact Us
    • Advertising
    • Reader Panel
    • Subscribe
    • RSS

    Smithsonian Institution

    Produced by Clickability