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Breakdown products from perfluorinated alkyl substances (PFAS) degradation in a plasma-based water treatment process Raj Kamal Singh, Sujan Fernando, Sadjad Fakouri Baygi, Nicholas Multari, Selma Mededovic Thagard, and Thomas M. Holsen Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.8b07031 • Publication Date (Web): 15 Feb 2019 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on February 17, 2019
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Breakdown products from perfluorinated alkyl substances (PFAS)
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degradation in a plasma-based water treatment process
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Raj Kamal Singh †, Sujan Fernando ‡, Sadjad Fakouri Baygi ‡, Nicholas Multari †, Selma
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Mededovic Thagard †, Thomas M. Holsen *‡
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† Plasma Research Laboratory, Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, Clarkson
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University, Potsdam, New York 13699, United States
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‡ Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Clarkson University, Potsdam, New York
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13699, United States
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* Corresponding author; E-mail:
[email protected]; # +1-315-268-3851
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KEYWORDS: BYPRODUCTS; CYCLIC PERFLUOROALKANES; PERFLUOROALKYL
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SUBSTANCES; PFOA; PFOS; PLASMA
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ABSTRACT
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Byproducts produced when treating perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) and perfluorooctane sulfonate
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(PFOS) in water using a plasma treatment process intentionally operated to treat these compounds
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slowly to allow for byproduct accumulation were quantified. Several linear chain perfluoroalkyl
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carboxylic acids (PFCAs) (C4 to C7) were identified as byproducts of both PFOA and PFOS
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treatment. PFOA, perfluorohexane sulfonate (PFHxS) and perfluorobutane sulfonate (PFBS) were
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also found to be byproducts from PFOS degradation. Significant concentrations of fluoride ions,
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inorganic carbon and smaller organic acids (trifluoroacetic acid, acetic acid and formic acid) were
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also identified. In addition to PFCAs, PFHxS and PFBS, trace amounts of 43 PFOA-related and
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35 PFOS-related byproducts were also identified using a screening and search-based algorithm.
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Minor concentrations of gas-phase byproducts were also identified (< 2.5% of the F originally
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associated with the parent molecules) some of which are reported for the first time in
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perfluoroalkyl substance degradation experiments including cyclic perfluoroalkanes (C4F8, C5F10,
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C6F12, C7F14 and C8F16). The short chain PFCAs detected suggest the occurrence of a step-wise
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reduction of the parent perfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) molecule, followed by oxidation of
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intermediates, perfluoroalkyl radicals and perfluoro alcohols/ketones. Using a fluorine mass
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balance, 77% of the fluorine associated with the parent PFOA and 58% of the fluorine associated
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with the parent PFOS were identified. The bulk of the remaining fluorine was determined to be
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sorbed to reactor walls and tubing using sorption experiments in which plasma was not generated.
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1. INTRODUCTION
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Perfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) are carbon-chain based organo-fluorine compounds containing
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stable C-F bonds. The most commonly encountered PFAS are perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) and
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perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS), which were widely used in many commercial and industrial
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applications. Disposal of PFAS-containing products, the discharge of industrial and municipal
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wastewater and the use of aqueous film forming foams in firefighting has resulted in widespread
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PFAS contamination of surface water and groundwater including many drinking water supplies.1–4
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PFAS have recently received considerable attention due to their ubiquitous presence, recalcitrance
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in the environment, and toxic properties.1,5
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The most commonly employed water treatment technologies for the removal of PFAS from water
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are activated carbon and ion-exchange. However, relatively short breakthrough times and
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generation of waste including saturated adsorbent and concentrated brine solution (from ion-
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exchange resin regeneration), which require further treatment or disposal make the search for
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effective treatment technologies important.6 Previous studies have consistently demonstrated the
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difficulty of breaking the stable C-F bonds by hydroxyl radicals generated as primary oxidants
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from conventional advanced oxidation processes (AOPs) such as UV/H2O2/O3.7 However, other
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AOPs
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microwave/persulfate,12 and ionizing radiation (electron beam,13 γ-irradiation14) including
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plasma15 have been reported to be effective for treatment of some PFAS.
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Plasma-based water treatment is a technology that, using only electricity, converts water into a
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mixture of highly reactive species including •OH, O, H•, HO2•, O2•‒, H2, O2, H2O2 and aqueous
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electrons (e-aq) called a plasma.16,17 When applied for water treatment, plasmas are generally
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formed by means of an electrical discharge between two electrodes-one high voltage and one
such
as
photocatalysis,8
electrochemical
oxidation,9
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persulfate,10
sonolysis,11
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grounded-within or contacting the contaminated water. To date, a variety of electrical discharge
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plasma reactor types featuring different electrode arrangements have been used to treat a wide
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range of organic and inorganic contaminants including pharmaceuticals18,19 and VOCs20, among
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other compounds.21
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Recently, we have developed an enhanced contact plasma reactor for the destruction of PFAS that
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was able to remove PFOA and PFOS to below regulatory limits with removal efficiencies greater
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than those of leading alternative technologies.22 The reactor features a high voltage electrode in
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the gas, just above the liquid surface and a grounded ring electrode submerged just beneath the
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liquid surface to achieve contact between plasma streamers and the entire reactor volume. Plasma
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is formed by applying a sufficiently high electrical potential between the high voltage and
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grounded electrodes via an external plasma-generating network. Argon gas is pumped through
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submerged diffusers to produce bubbles and form a layer of foam on the liquid surface. This foam
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concentrates surfactant-like contaminants (e.g., PFAS) and enhances the contact between the
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liquid and the plasma, exposing the contaminant at the gas-liquid interface to reactive oxidative
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and reductive species in the plasma.21 Unlike other AOPs which are solely based on the production
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of OH radicals, plasma treatment involves generation of reductive species (hot and aqueous
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electrons, hydrogen radicals) and ions (e.g., argon ions) without requiring any chemical inputs.
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Aqueous electrons have been shown to be directly, and argon ions indirectly, responsible for the
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degradation of PFAS during a plasma treatment.22
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Most AOP studies report short-chain (C2-C7) perfluoroalkyl carboxylic acids (PFCAs), fluoride
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ions, and carbon dioxide as byproducts of PFOA and PFOS degradation. However the initial
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reactions involved can be distinct, involving different types of reactive species: electron transfer
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between Fe3+ ions and PFOA in an UV-Fenton process,23 abstraction of an electron from PFOA 4 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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by holes generated in a photocatalytic process,24 direct electron transfer from –COOH group of
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PFOA to the anode in an electrochemical process,9 and attack of sulfate radical causing –COOH
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cleavage of PFAS in persulfate oxidation.10 The main mechanism involved in sonochemical
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degradation of PFOS is based on pyrolysis, where the -SO3- group can cleave at temperatures
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around 1000 K close to the bubble-water interface. In addition, ultrasonic pressure waves which
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can generate internal bubble temperatures of up to 4000 K lead to an instantaneous mineralization
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of PFOA/PFOS to F-, SO42-, CO, and CO2 without generating short chain PFCAs.25 In ionizing
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radiation, attack of aqueous electrons, hydrogen atoms and other reducing species may be the
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predominant initiating reaction mechanism of PFOA degradation.13,14
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There is very limited information on the fluorine mass balance in previous studies which suggests
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that many byproducts may not have been identified. For example, there is little information on the
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gaseous byproducts that may be produced. In addition, most AOP degradation studies have
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reported short chain (C4-C7) PFCAs as the main byproducts from PFOS treatment but not shorter
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chain perfluoroalkane sulfonates (PFSAs).
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The primary objective of this work was to determine the species produced during PFAS
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degradation in a plasma treatment process. The reactor used was intentionally operated to treat the
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PFAS slowly to allow for byproduct accumulation and subsequent identification. Both liquid and
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gas phase byproducts were quantified, their distribution across the phases determined and a
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fluorine mass balance constructed. Unconventional liquid phase byproducts were identified and
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their concentrations indirectly estimated using a computer-based algorithm with the data acquired
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from ultra-performance liquid chromatograph–quadrupole time of flight–high resolution mass
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spectrometer (UPLC-QToF-HRMS) analysis. Using the byproducts identified, a degradation
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mechanism for PFOA and PFOS in the plasma process was proposed. 5 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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2. MATERIALS AND METHODS
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Chemicals
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Analytical grade PFOA and PFOS (linear chain only, no branched isomers) were purchased from
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Sigma Aldrich (St. Louis, MO). The standards of linear perfluoroalkyl carboxylic acids, sulfonates
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and labeled internal standards (refer to supplementary information (SI) Table S1) were purchased
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from Wellington Laboratories (Guelph, ON). Methanol and acetonitrile (LC-MS grade) were
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purchased from Thermo Fisher Scientific (Waltham, MA).
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Electrical circuit and plasma reactor
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A custom built high-voltage power supply was used for the generation of plasma. Pulses of 40 Hz
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frequency were generated by charging a 2 nF capacitor, and discharging it through a rotating spark
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gap. A negative voltage of 30 kV was used for all the experiments. A schematic for the electrical
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circuit is shown in Figure S1 (SI) and discussed elsewhere.22
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The plasma reactor was a glass vessel of diameter 17.3 cm and height 19 cm (total reactor volume
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3.8 L), which consisted of a sharpened nickel-chromium rod (diameter = 2.2 mm) as a high voltage
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(HV) electrode, and an aluminum ring (outer diameter = 9.8 cm, inner diameter = 6 cm) as a ground
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electrode. The HV electrode was placed in the headspace region and the ground electrode was
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fitted as a ring around the diffuser circumference submerged in the liquid. The spacing between
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the HV and ground electrode was 2.7 cm (1.5 cm in liquid, 1.2 cm in gas). The top opening of the
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glass vessel was sealed with an airtight polymer cap which was adapted to allow for integration of
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electrodes, extraction of liquid and gaseous samples, and gas recirculation. Argon gas was
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introduced through the submerged diffuser and recirculated through the headspace with a flow rate
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of 4 L/min. The schematic of the overall experimental setup in shown in Figure 1. To allow for
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byproduct accumulation, the discharge energy was much lower than was used in the high rate
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plasma reactor in our previous study (0.24 vs 0.63 J/pulse).22
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Figure 1. Schematic of the experimental setup.
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Experimental procedure
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At the start of the experiments the reactor was filled with 1.5 L of either 8.3 mg/L of PFOA or
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PFOS solution and then treated for time intervals of 30, 60, and 120 min. The initial solution pH
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was around 4.6 and the electrical conductivity was adjusted to 300 µS/cm using 0.1 M NaCl. Gas
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and liquid samples were collected using air tight gas canisters (1 L) and syringes, respectively. To
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measure sorption of PFAS onto reactor components, sorption experiments were performed,
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maintaining the same experimental conditions but without plasma being generated.
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Analytical procedures
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Liquid byproducts
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Methods. A Waters Acuity UPLC coupled to a Q-TOF (Xevo G2-XS) and HR-MS was used for
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the analysis of PFAS and their liquid byproducts. Separation was performed with a Waters Acquity
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HSS T3 column (2.1 mm x 100 mm, 1.8 µm) and samples were analyzed by electrospray in
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negative ion mode. Samples were diluted with methanol (1:3 ratio) and then sonicated and
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centrifuged prior to injection (20 µL). A detailed description of analytical method is provided in
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supplementary information (Text S1 and Table S2).
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Quality Assurance. For quality assurance and control, all samples were spiked with 2 ng of
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labeled internal standards. Based on the analysis of method blanks, the limit of detection (LOD)
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was determined to be 0.2 ng/L, however, the lower limit of quantification (LOQ) was set to be 1
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ng/L with signal to noise ratio of 10:1. Six point calibration in the range of 10 and 5000 ng/L was
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used for the quantification of samples using C-13 isotopic dilution or internal standard methods
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(details are provided in Table S1 (SI)). Quantification was performed with MassLynksTM 4.1
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(Waters Corporation) using regression fit of r2 > 0.98 and deviation < 30%. Calibration standards
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were reinjected in the sample sequence to validate the time dependent response from the
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instrument. Analyzed data were quantified if surrogate recovery was between 70 and 120%.
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Concentrations of PFAS in the samples were normalized with respect to surrogate recovery.
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Simulation for identification of unconventional liquid byproducts. The identification and
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confirmation of unconventional byproducts is challenging due to the lack of commercial standards.
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However, with the aid of high-resolution mass spectrometry it was possible to identify a number
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of potential byproducts based on mass accuracy (within 5 ppm) of the measured molecular ion [M-
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H]-. For this work, a screen and search algorithm which uses this approach developed previously
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by Baygi et al. was used.26 The algorithm has four basic steps: (1) identification of candidate
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compounds with elemental composition compatible with PFOA or PFOS, (2) generation of
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candidate compound spectra matrix using their theoretical isotopic distribution, (3) candidate list
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screening by matching theoretical m/z with mass spectral data, and (4) retention time
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determination of targeted m/z using isotopic profile determination. The output was the elemental
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composition for each m/z feature in the chromatogram which have a formula that resembles a
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PFAS.
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Gaseous byproducts
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The gas-phase PFAS decomposition products were analyzed using a Markes Unity and CIA
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thermal desorption system coupled to a Thermo Trace GC Ultra gas chromatograph and a Thermo
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DSQ II quadrupole mass spectrometer. The thermal desorption system was used to sample 50 mL
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of the headspace gas from the canisters which was trapped and focused on a cold trap at 0ºC and
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then injected (split 20:1) into the GC by heating the cold trap rapidly (20ºC/sec) to 300ºC.
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Separation was carried out on a Rt-Alumina BOND/CFC column (30 m length x 0.53 mm i.d x 10
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µm film thickness) at constant pressure of 5 psi. Oven temperature was initially set at 100ºC for
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one minute, then ramped at a rate of 5ºC/min to 200ºC and held for 10 minutes. The transfer line
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to the MS was set to 200ºC. The MS was operated in negative ion chemical ionization (NICI)
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mode, where methane was used as a reagent gas with the ion source temperature set to 150ºC. Data
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were collected in the mass range of 50 and 500 amu.
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Fluoride quantification
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Fluoride ions (F-) were measured as per EPA 9214 method with an Accumet Excel XL60 meter
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kit (Fisher Scientific) with a combination electrode (Accumet) and total ionic strength adjustment
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buffer (TISAB, VWR Chemicals).
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Ion chromatography
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Sulfate (SO42-), formate (HCOO-), acetate (CH3COO-) and trifluoroacetate (CF3COO-) ion
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concentrations were measured using ion chromatography (Dionex Integrion HPIC) equipped with
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an AS11 (4 mm i.d.) column and a conductivity detector. Sodium hydroxide solution (NaOH, 23
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mM) was used as the eluent with a constant flow rate of 1 mL/min.
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Inorganic carbon analysis
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Inorganic carbon was measured by difference between total carbon before and after acid sparging
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using a TOC analyzer (Shimadzu Model OC-VCPH).
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RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
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Quantification of liquid byproducts
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Plasma-based water treatment degrades PFOA and PFOS into various short-chain PFCAs and
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PFSAs. In this study, 90% of the PFOA was removed in 60 min, a much slower rate than in the
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high rate plasma reactor used in our earlier study, where a similar percentage was removed in 30
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min.22 Perfluoroheptanoic acid (PFHpA), perfluorohexanoic acid (PFHxA), perfluoropentanoic
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acid (PFPeA) and perfluorobutanoic acid (PFBA) are common byproducts of both PFOA and
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PFOS degradation, with two additional byproducts (perfluorohexane sulfonate (PFHxS) and
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perfluorobutane sulfonate (PFBS)) detected for PFOS only. The concentrations of all the 10 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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byproducts increased in the first 60 minutes of treatment and then decreased by the end of the
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experiment (Figure 2a and b). The structures of all byproducts analyzed in this study are shown in
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Table S3. For PFOS, the peak concentrations of PFOA (C8) and PFHpA (C7) were at 30 and 60
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minutes of treatment time respectively, and the trend of decreasing peak concentrations of PFOA
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(C8) > PFHpA (C7) > PFHxA (C6) > PFPeA (C5) > PFBA (C4) suggests a step-wise chain
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propagation degradation of PFOS with PFOA as the first byproduct.
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Figure 2. Concentration profiles of (a) PFOA and (b) PFOS and their byproducts with treatment
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time; experiments were performed in triplicate, and the average with standard deviations are
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displayed in the plots. The reactor was intentionally operated to treat the PFAS slowly to allow for
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byproduct accumulation and subsequent identification. Molar concentration profiles of these
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byproducts are shown in Figure S2.
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These byproducts were further mineralized to CF3COOH, CH3COOH, HCOOH, F- and SO42- (the
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latter only in the case of PFOS) and the concentrations of all these compounds increased with
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treatment time (Figure 3). Inorganic carbon concentrations also increased by 0.18 and 0.20 mg/L
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after a 120 min treatment from PFOA and PFOS degradation, respectively. Significant
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concentrations of sulfate ions were detected after 120 min of treatment of PFOS, which
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corresponds to 85% of the theoretical sulfate that could be produced from the oxidation of sulfur
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present in 8.3 mg/L (initial concentration) of PFOS. It should be noted that the concentration of
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gaseous CO2 was not measured. These results collectively indicate significant mineralization of
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the parent and their byproduct compounds.
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Figure 3. Concentrations of smaller organic acids, fluoride and sulfate produced during the
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degradation of (a) PFOA and (b) PFOS.
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As mentioned, plasma electrons, aqueous electrons and argon ions are the main species responsible
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for PFAS degradation. As shown in Figure 4, the attack of these species on the –COOH functional
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group of the PFOA molecule may result in the formation of unstable perfluoroalkyl radicals such
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of •C7F15 moieties, which in subsequent radical recombination with •OH may lead to the formation
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of perfluoro alcohols (C7F15OH).7 Thermally unstable enol (-OH) could be transformed into the
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more stable keto (=O) form (C6F13COF) by HF elimination caused by the thermal transfer of e-
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aq.
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molecule. Chain propagation reactions involving reductive and oxidative species and subsequent
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hydrolysis yield short chain PFCAs. The degradation pathway of PFOS appears to be similar to
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Further, the hydrolysis of C6F13COF yields C6F13COOH with the loss of one more HF
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that of PFOA with the inclusion of a chain initiation reaction involving the attack of electrons or
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argon ions on the C-S bond resulting in SO3- group cleavage from the terminal carbon and
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formation of •C8F17 radicals. The chain propagation reactions of •C8F17 result in the formation of
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short-chain PFCAs (Figure 4). Short chain PFSAs such as PFHxS and PFBS may be formed by
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the reactions of SO3•- with •C6F13 and •C4F9, respectively. Please note that perfluoroheptane
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sulfonate (PFHpS) or perfluoropentane sulfonate (PFPeS) were not measured due to a lack of
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analytical standards, but it is likely that they would also have formed following the proposed
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degradation pathway.
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Figure 4. Proposed degradation pathway for PFOA and PFOS in plasma treatment. Note that of
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the PFAS shown only perfluoropropanoic acid (PFPA) was not quantified.
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Chemical reactions of plasma reactive species with PFOA, PFOS and their byproducts can lead to
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the formation of a large number of transient and stable compounds. A number of novel byproducts
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were identified based on accurate mass measurements and isotopic profile (section 2.4.1). Using
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this approach, 43 and 35 novel byproducts of PFOA and PFOS, respectively were identified (Table
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S4). Based on the response (peak area), these byproducts were further subdivided into three classes
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as low (area