Can nanoparticles help fight hunger? | Christy L. Haynes

Episode Summary

In her 2022 TEDxMinneapolis talk, chemist Christy L. Haynes explores the potential of nanoparticles to significantly impact agriculture and combat global hunger. Haynes, a chemistry professor with a personal history of food insecurity, is driven by the challenge of hunger on our planet. She introduces the concept of using nanoscience to address agricultural crises, specifically the loss of crop productivity due to disease, pests, and poor soil conditions, which is exacerbated by climate change. Haynes explains that between 20 and 40% of crop productivity is lost to these factors, a significant barrier to feeding the global population. Nanoparticles, as Haynes describes, are extremely small particles that exhibit unique chemical and physical properties due to their size. These properties can be manipulated by altering the nanoparticles' size, shape, and chemical composition, making them useful in a wide range of applications, including agriculture. Haynes's research focuses on designing silica nanoparticles that can be taken up by plants to release silicic acid, a compound that strengthens plant cell walls and boosts their immune response. This innovative approach aims to make plants healthier and more resistant to diseases and pests, thereby increasing food production. Haynes shares promising results from greenhouse and field studies where watermelon seedlings treated with silica nanoparticles showed significantly improved health and yield, especially when grown in soil infected with a fungal pathogen. These findings suggest that a single application of nanoparticles can lead to a substantial increase in crop yield, with no detectable nanoparticles in the edible parts of the plants. The cost-effectiveness of this treatment, at only about two cents per plant or $19 per acre, makes it a viable option for farmers seeking to increase productivity and reduce crop loss. Concluding her talk, Haynes calls for an open-minded approach to nanotechnology and urges funding agencies, farmers, and policymakers to support research and application of nanotechnology in agriculture. She envisions a future where advanced nanotechnology, including the use of silica nanoparticles, plays a crucial role in ensuring food security and feeding the global population.

Episode Show Notes

A game-changing solution to the global food crisis could come from something so tiny you can't see it with the naked eye. Nanomaterials chemist Christy Haynes describes her team's work designing nanoparticles that could protect plants from disease and crop loss, helping farmers reap abundant harvests and grow food that will make its way to markets and dinner tables.

Episode Transcript

SPEAKER_01: TED Audio Collective. You're listening to TED Talks Daily.I'm your host, Elise Hu.A potentially game-changing solution to the global food crisis could come in something so tiny you can't see it with your naked eye.In her 2022 talk from TEDxMinneapolis, chemist Christy Haynes tells us how nanoparticles could save agriculture from huge losses due to disease and help fight hunger around the world.After the break. TED Talks Daily is brought to you by Progressive.Progressive helps you compare direct auto rates from a variety of companies so you can find a great one, even if it's not with them.Quote today at Progressive.com to find a rate that works with your budget.Progressive Casualty Insurance Company and Affiliates. Comparison rates not available in all states or situations. 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SPEAKER_02: Imagine you're a farmer and you've planted enough crops to feed your family for the coming year.The weather is surprisingly good at the beginning of the growing season, but after those seeds are in the ground and the stalks start to peak up from the soil, a disease that you cannot see cuts your expected yield in half.You think to yourself, what will my family eat? In the coming year, perhaps you'll fumigate your soil, maybe you'll add extra fertilizer, maybe you'll apply a fungicide or a pesticide hoping to decrease crop loss.You know that these traditional technologies work, but you also know they have some negative implications for our ecosystem. This, of course, is not an imaginary scenario.We could feed every person on this planet if we didn't lose so much to disease, pest, and poor soil conditions.It's estimated that we lose between 20 and 40% of crop productivity due to preventable disease and pest attack.And climate change is only making this worse. I stand here in front of you, a very unlikely person to help solve an agricultural crisis. I'm a chemistry professor who studies nanoparticles in sterile laboratories.I grew up in the desert, and I don't even keep houseplants, much less crops, alive, but I know that some of the best solutions to big problems come when folks from different or even opposing fields bring some of their simplest concepts together.And that is exactly what I think is possible here, as I tell you that nanoparticles may be a critical part of the solution to our global food crisis.Let me tell you why I'm so intent on using nanoscience to fight hunger. We all have the issues that touch us deepest, and for me, it has always been hunger.I find it intolerable that there are hungry people on this life-giving planet of ours.I can trace this, at least in part, to some of my own experience growing up. For a period of my childhood, I lived in a food insecure household.We benefited from food shelf donations, and we only ate what my mom could get with her hard work on double coupon day at the local supermarket. I loved the one day a month I was allowed to buy school lunch.Now, I don't know why my parents didn't apply for free school lunch or food stamps, but the end situation was one where sometimes the refrigerator and the cupboards were empty.Now, it's been a long time since I have worried about food for myself. But that feeling of being hungry is etched deep within me.I am driven to do something about hunger.And the unusual talent that I bring to the task is my deep knowledge of designing and synthesizing nanomaterials that can carry molecular cargo and transform into specific chemical species.Let me stop and give a little bit of background about nanoscience. The prefix nano signifies a billionth, so a nanometer is a billionth of a meter.In other words, nanoparticles are extremely small.You cannot see them with your naked eye or even a high-powered light microscope. In fact, you need a specialized instrument called a transmission electron microscope to even see nanoparticles. Nanoparticles have actually been around forever.You can find naturally occurring nanoparticles in geological formations or in the aerosol particles that we breathe.But in the last few decades, scientists and engineers have gotten very excited about nanomaterials because we realized that as you shrink things down to the nanoscale, their chemical and physical properties can change drastically. For example, a material that's usually unreactive, when you shrink it down to the nanoscale, can suddenly catalyze a whole host of chemical reactions.Or a material that doesn't usually conduct electricity suddenly does.As scientists tune the size, shape, and chemical composition of a material, they can tune those chemical and physical properties. Nanoscience gives us a seemingly unlimited palette of accessible chemical and physical properties.I'm sure you can imagine how useful that can be.And scientists have gotten very good at knowing exactly how to design nanomaterials to have the properties they want. We are in a perfect moment to take advantage of all of the hard-won knowledge that has been systematically gained in laboratories around the world. And that's already happening.You can find engineered nanoparticles in a range of products and applications, many of which are focused on some of our biggest sustainability challenges.Personally, I like to work on the nanomaterials that make up the core of lithium-ion batteries for electric vehicles.But you'll also find nanomaterials in water filtration technology, solar cells, and even in clinical applications.With all of that background, now let me tell you about some of the nanomaterials my research group is developing for agricultural applications. In some ways, the nanoparticles seem very simple.They're made of silica, or SiO2 in chemistry language.This is the same chemical composition that describes glass or sand.And the simple choice was not an accident. We wanted to work with Earth-abundant elements, and you can't do much better than silicon and oxygen on that front. The researchers in my lab are very skilled at designing silicon nanoparticles with controlled size and surface chemistry.We also work hard to control the pore structure, because that determines the total surface area, as well as the strength of the bonds that hold the nanomaterials together.That's because all of those factors are critically important for our end goal, which is to get these nanoparticles inside plants, either by infiltrating seeds or by allowing them to pass through pores on the leaf surface, and then once they're internalized, having them transform to release a molecule that the plant can use to protect itself from viruses, fungi, or pest attacks.In technical terms, we want our silica nanoparticles to react with water in the environment and dissolve to release a molecule called silicic acid. You can think of salicylic acid for plants like the multivitamin that you take every morning.Plants already contain salicylic acid.They use it to build their cell walls.We want to deliver an extra boost of salicylic acid with the hypothesis that they'll build stronger cell walls and boost their own immune response. So now, hopefully you can see the whole picture.We designed silicon nanoparticles with the right size, shape, and surface chemistry to be taken up into a plant. We also designed them so that once they're internalized, they dissolve to release enough silicic acid that the plants live healthier and longer, producing more food.With all of that background, now let me tell you about some of the early exciting results from greenhouse and field studies.We've made many variations on the silica nanoparticle theme. All of them have the same scale bar, that's just 100 nanometers, and all of them are small enough to go into the pores on a leaf surface.The pore structure ends up being very important because the more water can react with the surface of the nanoparticle, the better it dissolves and the more silicic acid is released.With all of these nanoparticles in hand, we started working with colleagues within the NSF Center for Sustainable Nanotechnology to start our first plant studies.The initial studies were very simple, using watermelon seedlings in a greenhouse. We had watermelon seedlings that were going to be planted either in healthy soil or soil infested with fusarium, a fungal soil-borne pathogen. Before planting them, we dipped them in our silicon nanoparticles and then we allowed them to grow in the greenhouse.Of course, we also had a parallel set of plants that received no nanoparticles growing in both healthy and diseased soil.So the goal was to figure out how that single application of silicon nanoparticles impacted the plants growing in both healthy and diseased soil. And the results that we saw were really exciting.We found that the plants that were growing in infected soil that had received that one dose of silica nanoparticles were 30 to 40 percent healthier than the ones that had not. With this exciting result, we decided to try some field studies using the same soil conditions and the same nanoparticle conditions.So we planted watermelon, either in healthy or infected soil, and we allowed them to grow for 100 days.We tracked the fungal disease, and we also measured the amount of fruit that was produced after 100 days.And what we found is that that one application of one to two milliliters of silica nanoparticles way back at the seedling stage led us to a 70 percent increase in watermelon yield. Ideally, none of the nanoparticles would end up in the fruit that people are going to eat, so we analyzed the roots and the above-ground tissue and the edible fruit for any sign of silica nanoparticles.We saw no increased silica in the edible watermelon fruit, meaning that these nanoparticles did exactly what we designed them to do. Given the small amount of nanomaterials that we applied to each one of those plants, the cost per plant is only about two cents, or $19, for an acre.This is a cost-effective treatment.By adding $19 worth of nanoparticles to the average fertilizer cost of $250, a farmer would yield thousands of dollars increase in fruit production. With these exciting results in hand, we have a lot of other experiments planned and in progress.We want to do multiple applications of nanoparticles and applications later in the growth process to see if that further increases our yield.We want to do studies on soybean and wheat, critical crops here in the Midwest and around the world.Two researchers in my lab recently applied silicon nanoparticles to potato plants in the field.They're going to help harvest and analyze the results this fall. I hope that what you see is that this data is really compelling and that nanoparticles have tons of potential to help decrease crop loss.And I only told you about silica nanoparticles.I can imagine other important chemical compositions and even parallel application, like the remediation of soil pollutants. I ask you all to be open-minded about nanotechnology, encouraging funding agencies worldwide to invest.In the U.S., ask your senators and representatives to invest in the National Science Foundation, the National Institutes of Health, and the U.S.Department of Agriculture for both basic and translational research.I know farmers are already embracing advanced technology in terms of robots and drones and implant sensors.I encourage them to embrace this advance as well. Now, go back to imagining that you're that farmer, and you've planted enough crops to feed your family for the coming year.You do all of the normal things, except this time, maybe you use seeds that were infiltrated with silica nanoparticles. Or maybe you go through once, and you spray silica nanoparticles onto your crops.As these tiny nanoparticles deliver a big boost of silicic acid from the inside, your plants overcome disease, and your family is fed. Let's use all of the hard work that has been done on basic nanotechnology research to feed our global family for years to come.Thank you. SPEAKER_01: Support for TED Talks Daily comes from Odoo.If you feel like you're wasting time and money with your current business software or just want to know what you could be missing, then you need to join the millions of other users who switched to Odoo.Odoo is the affordable all-in-one management software with a library of fully integrated business applications that help you get more done in less time. for a fraction of the price.To learn more, visit odoo.com slash TED Talks.That's O-D-O-O dot com slash TED Talks.Odoo.Modern management made simple.