Subscriber access provided by Queen Mary, University of London
Article
Investigating the Biodegradability of a Fluorotelomer-Based Acrylate Polymer in a Soil-Plant Microcosm by Indirect and Direct Analysis Keegan Rankin, Holly Lee, Pablo J Tseng, and Scott Andrew Mabury Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/es502986w • Publication Date (Web): 08 Oct 2014 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on October 11, 2014
Just Accepted “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been peer-reviewed and accepted for publication. They are posted online prior to technical editing, formatting for publication and author proofing. The American Chemical Society provides “Just Accepted” as a free service to the research community to expedite the dissemination of scientific material as soon as possible after acceptance. “Just Accepted” manuscripts appear in full in PDF format accompanied by an HTML abstract. “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been fully peer reviewed, but should not be considered the official version of record. They are accessible to all readers and citable by the Digital Object Identifier (DOI®). “Just Accepted” is an optional service offered to authors. Therefore, the “Just Accepted” Web site may not include all articles that will be published in the journal. After a manuscript is technically edited and formatted, it will be removed from the “Just Accepted” Web site and published as an ASAP article. Note that technical editing may introduce minor changes to the manuscript text and/or graphics which could affect content, and all legal disclaimers and ethical guidelines that apply to the journal pertain. ACS cannot be held responsible for errors or consequences arising from the use of information contained in these “Just Accepted” manuscripts.
Environmental Science & Technology is published by the American Chemical Society. 1155 Sixteenth Street N.W., Washington, DC 20036 Published by American Chemical Society. Copyright © American Chemical Society. However, no copyright claim is made to original U.S. Government works, or works produced by employees of any Commonwealth realm Crown government in the course of their duties.
Page 1 of 27
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
Environmental Science & Technology
Investigating the Biodegradability of a Fluorotelomer-Based Acrylate Polymer in a Soil-Plant Microcosm by Indirect and Direct Analysis Keegan Rankin, Holly Lee, Pablo J. Tseng and Scott A. Mabury* Department of Chemistry, University of Toronto, 80 St. George St., Toronto, Ontario, Canada, M5S 3H6 *Corresponding author: Phone: (416) 978-1780; Fax: (416) 978-3596; Email:
[email protected] Abstract
13
Fluorotelomer-based acrylate polymers (FTACPs) are a class of side-chain fluorinated
14
polymers used for a variety of commercial applications. The degradation of FTACPs through
15
ester hydrolysis and/or cleavage of the polymer backbone could serve as a significant source of
16
perfluoroalkyl carboxylates (PFCAs). The biodegradation of FTACPs was evaluated in a soil-
17
plant microcosm over 5.5 months in the absence/presence of wastewater treatment plant
18
(WWTP) biosolids, using a unique FTACP determined to be a homopolymer of 8:2
19
fluorotelomer acrylate (8:2 FTAC). Though structurally different from commercial FTACPs, the
20
unique FTACP possesses 8:2 fluorotelomer side chain appendages bound to the polymer
21
backbone via ester moieties. Liberation and subsequent biodegradation of the 8:2 fluorotelomer
22
appendages was indirectly determined by monitoring for PFCAs of varying chain lengths (C6-
23
C9) and known fluorotelomer intermediates by liquid chromatography tandem mass
24
spectrometry (LC-MS/MS). A FTACP biodegradation half-life range of 8-111 years was
25
inferred from the 8:2 fluorotelomer alcohol (8:2 FTOH) equivalent of the unique FTACP and the
26
increase of degradation products. The progress of FTACP biodegradation was also directly
27
monitored qualitatively using matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight (MALDI-
28
TOF) mass spectrometry. The combination of indirect and direct analysis indicated that the
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
1
Environmental Science & Technology
29
model FTACP biodegraded predominantly to perfluorooctanoate (PFOA) in soils, and at a
30
significantly higher rate in the presence of a plant and WWTP biosolids.
Page 2 of 27
31 32 33
Introduction Fluorotelomer-based polymers (FTPs) are commonly used surface protectants in the
34
carpet, textile, upholstery and paper industries.1 The manufacture of FTPs constitutes >80% of
35
all fluorotelomer-based raw materials produced worldwide.2 Recent concerns have been raised
36
over the role of FTPs as perfluoroalkyl carboxylate (PFCA) precursors.3,4 Residual
37
fluorotelomer alcohols (FTOHs) are known to be present in FTP materials,5,6 and have been
38
demonstrated to readily biodegrade to PFCAs in aerobic soil and waste water treatment plant
39
(WWTP) media.7-12 At levels 7 CF2), which have a demonstrated ability to accumulate in biota.20,21
55
Russell et al.3 proposed two potential degradation pathways of FTPs: 1) cleavage of the
56
ester or urethane linkage or 2) breakage of the carbon-carbon backbone. Cleavage of the linking
57
moiety would release the bound fluorotelomer appendage as FTOHs that then degrade to PFCAs.
58
Recent studies demonstrated that pathway 1 could occur via microbial hydrolysis of ester
59
linkages of fluorotelomer-based material under aerobic environments, such as polyfluoroalkyl
60
phosphate esters (PAPs) and fluorotelomer stearate monoester (FTS).22,23 Alternatively,
61
breaking the polymer backbone would yield smaller oligomeric species, which could more
62
readily biodegrade because of the lower molecular weight. If the linking ester moieties are
63
inaccessible to microbes, then pathway 2 could occur via β-oxidation of the polymer backbone
64
as reported for polyacrylic acid.24
65
The approach for assessing the biodegradability of FTPs used to date, was to measure
66
both intermediates and terminal PFCA products that result from the biotransformation of FTOHs
67
rather than analytically probing the polymer directly. This indirect approach was used in the
68
three FTP biodegradation studies.3,4,13 However, the presence of intermediates and PFCAs does
69
not directly confirm FTP degradation, as the PFCAs themselves may be present in commercial
70
products or result from the degradation of other fluorotelomer-based residual materials. As such,
71
the detection of target analytes above residual levels was generally used to identify FTP
72
degradation,4 a difficult task if there is a large background signal. In two parallel studies, the
73
biodegradation half-lives for FTACPs and FTURPs were calculated to be 1200-1700 and 79-241
74
years respectively, based on polymer mass.3,13 In a separate study, Washington et al.4 reported a
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
3
Environmental Science & Technology
75
biodegradation half-life for FTACPs of 870-1400 years based on polymer mass, but also
76
suggested that the half-life could be closer to 10-17 years when normalized to the polymer
77
particle surface area. The discrepancy between these half-lives is a reason the biodegradability
78
of FTPs remains widely debated.
Page 4 of 27
79
The objective of this study was to evaluate the biodegradation of a unique FTACP in a
80
soil-plant microcosm over 5 months. The unique FTACP was synthesized in-house using 8:2
81
fluorotelomer acrylate (8:2 FTAC) as the primary monomer, and exhaustively purified by
82
removing volatile FTACs and/or FTOH residuals prior to incubation. Biodegradation of the
83
model FTACP was evaluated under several different soil conditions, including soils amended
84
with WWTP biosolids and sown with the alfalfa species, Medicago truncatula. Quantification of
85
degradation products by liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) served
86
as an indirect means to determine FTACP biodegradation and were used to estimate FTACP
87
biodegradation half-lives. We also report herein, the first direct evidence of FTACP
88
biodegradation using matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight (MALDI-TOF)
89
mass spectrometry to analyze the polymer itself.
90 91 92 93
Experimental Chemicals. A complete list of chemicals used in this study can be found in the Supporting Information (SI).
94
Microcosm Materials. Sandy loam soil was collected from an agricultural farmland
95
(Northumberland County, ON; 44o05’N, 78o01’W) in 2009 and sieved with a 2 mm stainless
96
steel mesh. Soil characterization was performed by SGS AgriFood Laboratories (Guelph, ON)
97
and reported as follows: pH 5.5; 1.8% organic matter; cation exchange capacity of 96 µmol/g; 49
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
4
Page 5 of 27
Environmental Science & Technology
98
mg/kg of NaHCO3-extractable P; 63% sand, 32% silt and 5% clay. WWTP biosolid material
99
(30% solids) was obtained from the North Toronto WWTP (Toronto, ON) in 2009. The alfafa
100
plant species Medicago truncatula was grown from seeds donated by the Stinchcombe research
101
group (Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Toronto, ON).
102
FTACP Polymerization. Multiple approaches were attempted to synthesize a FTACP
103
possessing three repeating monomers, but were unsuccessful. A unique FTACP homopolymer
104
was synthesized in-house by aqueous dispersion following two commercial patents,14,15 and is
105
detailed in the SI. Briefly, 8:2 FTAC and butyl acrylate were added to an aqueous solution of
106
dodecyl amine hydrochloride and hexadecylthiol in a round bottom flask equipped with a
107
magnetic stirrer and dry ice condenser. The solution was purged with nitrogen for 2.5 hours at
108
5oC and then a cold solution of vinylidene chloride and acetone was added. The polymerization
109
was initiated with 2,2´-azobis(2-methylpropionamide) dihydrochloride (AIBA) and proceeded
110
for 15 hours at 80oC. Upon completion, the aqueous dispersion was filtered and the opaque
111
FTACP material was collected.
112
Residual Removal. Post-polymerization, a series of wash and heat purging steps were
113
used to remove residual FTOH and FTAC impurities. The FTACP material was placed under
114
vacuum while periodically washed with a 80:20 methanol:water solution for 14 days. The
115
FTACP material was then melted using a 95oC oil bath while continuously purged with carbon-
116
filtered air for 20 days. A fraction of the FTACP material was then heated in the same manner
117
for 3 days during which any volatile compounds were collected in XAD cartridges. The
118
cartridges were extracted with ethyl acetate and analyzed by gas chromatography-mass
119
spectrometry (GC-MS). Although this approach differs from the method recently reported by
120
Washington et al.,25 our method was also found to exhaustively extract volatile FTOHs and
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
5
Environmental Science & Technology
121
FTACs. The purified FTACP was determined to contain 4.71 and 2.63 nmole residual 8:2
122
FTOH and 8:2 FTAC per gram of FTACP representing 2.2 x 10-4 and 1.4 x 10-4 wt%,
123
respectively. Low PFCA levels, 4.7 x 10-7 wt%, were observed as impurities in the purified
124
FTACP, and explain the PFCAs concentrations observed at 0 months.
Page 6 of 27
125
FTACP Characterization. The unique FTACP was characterized by differential
126
scanning calorimetry (DSC) and MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry. DSC procedures and results
127
are presented in the SI. MALDI-TOF characterization was carried out using a Waters
128
Micromass MALDI micro MX™ TOF mass spectrometer (Waters Corporation, Milford, MA)
129
equipped with a nitrogen laser (λ = 337.1 nm) operated at a frequency of 5 Hz and rastered in a
130
pre-set pattern. Mass spectra were acquired in positive ion and reflectron modes using a flight
131
tube voltage of 12 kV. A total of 100 mass spectra were acquired per sample, and summed using
132
Waters Mass Lynx V4.1 mass spectrometry software.
133
FTACP samples were prepared for MALDI-TOF analysis using the two-layer dried
134
droplet method.26,27 Dithranol served as the matrix and lithium trifluoroacetate as the
135
cationization agent, and were co-dissolved in trichloromethane (CHCl3) at 10 mg/mL and 1
136
mg/mL, respectively. FTACP samples were prepared in α,α,α-trifluorotoluene (TFT) at 10
137
mg/mL. Deposition of 1µL of the matrix:cationization agent solution onto a stainless steel
138
Waters MALDI target plate served as the first layer. A 1µL aliquot of the FTACP solution was
139
deposited as the second layer on top of the dried matrix:cationization agent solution.
140
Biodegradation Experimental Design. The five experimental variables were prepared
141
as follows: (1) Soil Control – soil without biosolids (n = 1 per timepoint); (2) Plant/Biosolids
142
Control – biosolids-amended soil sown with plant seeds (n = 3 per timepoint); (3) FTACP/Soil –
143
soil without biosolids mixed with 50 mg FTACP (n = 3 per timepoint); (4) FTACP/Plant – soil
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
6
Page 7 of 27
Environmental Science & Technology
144
without biosolids sown with plant seeds mixed with 50 mg FTACP (n = 3 per timepoint); (5)
145
FTACP/Plant/Biosolids – biosolids-amended soil sown with plant seeds mixed with 50 mg
146
FTACP (n = 3 per timepoint).
147
Biosolids-amended soils were prepared at a mixing rate of 16 g biosolids/kg of soil (~8.7
148
metric dry tons/ha) in an OdjobTM concrete mixer (Scepter Corporation, Toronto, ON). This rate
149
is similar to the 5-year maximal application rate of 8 tons/ha permitted in Ontario.28
150
Approximately 600 g soil and biosolids were transferred into each pot. Between 5–10 Medicago
151
truncatula seeds were planted in each pot for the three conditions, Plant/Biosolids Control,
152
FTACP/Plant and FTACP/Plant/Biosolids, followed by inoculation of cultured rhizobia.
153
Preparation of the rhizobia culture is described in the SI. Catch plates were placed under each
154
pot to capture some, though not all, target analytes that may have leached from the soil during
155
watering of the plants. All pots were kept in a greenhouse (Earth Sciences Centre, University of
156
Toronto, ON) for 5.5 months under natural sunlight and supplementary illumination (200
157
µmol/m2/sec) at a temperature regime of 25/21oC day/night, and watered daily.
158
Soils were sampled at 1.5, 3.5 and 5.5 months by sacrificing the entire pot, and then
159
immediately mixed with 100–300 mg of sodium azide (NaN3) to halt microbial activity. Initial
160
concentrations of target analytes were measured in soil using one pot (n = 1) of all five
161
conditions prior to the addition of the model FTACP. Soil was sampled in triplicate (n = 3) from
162
each of the three pots in all conditions at each time point, except for the Soil Control in which
163
soil was sampled from 1 pot. For Plant/Biosolids Control, FTACP/Plant and
164
FTACP/Plant/Biosolids, the plant shoots and roots were harvested, cleaned of soil particles and
165
archived together. Catch plates were also archived. All archived microcosm compartments were
166
stored at 4oC until analysis.
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
7
Environmental Science & Technology
167
Page 8 of 27
Extraction and Analysis. Soil extractions was performed on 2 g soil samples by
168
sonication at 60oC for 15-20 minutes in 5 mL of a basic methanol (1% (v/v) ammonium
169
hydroxide). Following centrifugation at 6000 rpm, the supernatant was decanted into a new
170
polypropylene tube, and the soil extracted a second time. The supernatants were combined and
171
blown to dryness. Plant matter was lyophilized and homogenized finely using a mortar pestle,
172
and 2 g samples extracted twice in 10 mL basic methanol sonication at 60oC for 15-20 minutes.
173
The extracts were cleaned using ENVI Carb cartridges (Supelclean, 1 mL/100 mg) and blown to
174
dryness. Catch plates were rinsed with 10 mL basic methanol and blown to dryness. Soil, plant
175
and catch plate extracts were reconstituted with 2 mL methanol, passed through 0.2 µm Nylon
176
filters, and then analyzed using an Agilent 1100 high pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC)
177
coupled to an Applied Biosystems/MDS Sciex API4000 triple quadrupole MS (Concord, ON)
178
operated in negative electrospray ionization mode. Chromatographic separation was performed
179
using a GeminiNX C18 column (4.6 x 50 mm, 3 µm; Phenomenex, Torrance, CA). Detailed
180
instrumental parameters used be found in the SI.
181
The unique FTACP was extracted from soils using α,α,α-trifluorotoluene (TFT). For
182
each pot, 2 x 5 g soil samples were each extracted with 5 mL of TFT by sonication and vortexing
183
for 5 minutes at room temperature. The two extracts per pot were combined and the solids
184
removed. The extract was then blown to dryness under nitrogen and re-constituted in 1 mL of
185
TFT. MALDI-TOF analysis was carried out using the procedures described above.
186
Quality Assurance (QA). Quantitation of the PFCAs, fluorotelomer carboxylates
187
(FTCAs) and fluorotelomer unsaturated carboxylates (FTUCAs) was performed using mass-
188
labeled internal standards except for those analytes where no corresponding mass-labeled
189
standards were available at the time of the experiment. In these few cases, quantification was
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
8
Page 9 of 27
Environmental Science & Technology
190
performed using structurally similar internal standards as surrogate standards (Table S1). Spike
191
and recoveries from soil, plant and catch plate ranged from 51-132, 73-135 and 32-105%,
192
respectively. Additional QA information is provided in the SI.
193 194 195
Results and Discussion FTACP Characterization. Structural characterization of the unique FTACP was
196
performed by MALDI-TOF producing a characteristic pattern indicative of a synthetic polymer
197
with repeating signals having a spacing of 518 Da for both major and minor series shown in SI
198
Figure S2. The number average molecular weight (Mn, Equation 1), weight average molecular
199
weight (Mw, Equation 2) and polydispersity index (PDI, Equation 3) were calculated from the
200
major repeating series to be 3007 and 3747 Da, and 1.25, respectively. These values are below
201
the ~40000 molecular weight postulated by Russell et al. for commercial FTACPs,3 which could
202
result in our unique FTACP being more susceptibility to biodegradation.
203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212
Mn = ΣMiNi ΣNi
(Eq. 1)
Mw = ΣMi2Ni ΣMiNi
(Eq. 2)
PDI = Mw Mn
(Eq. 3)
As the intended FTACP structure was to contain three repeating units and resemble the
213
suggested structure of commercial FTACPs (Figure 1A),3 the monomeric species 8:2 FTAC,
214
butyl acrylate and vinylidene chloride were all included in the polymerization. However, after
215
close inspection of the mass spectrum (Figure S2) and a comparison of the experimental and
216
theoretical isotopic pattern for the 1819 m/z signal (Figure S3), it was determined that neither
217
butyl acrylate nor vinylidene chloride were incorporated into the FTACP. The peak spacing of
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
9
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 10 of 27
218
518 Da corresponds to the mass of 8:2 FTAC and confirms the successful polymerization of a
219
FTACP. Our unique FTACP was determined to be solely a homopolymer of 8:2 FTAC
220
containing hydrogen and hexadecylthiol end groups (Figure 1B), and have primarily between 2
221
to 16 fluorotelomer appendages. Though the two FTACPs shown in Figure 1 have structural
222
differences, our unique FTACP (Figure 1B) possesses certain features that make it a suitable
223
surrogate to investigate the stability of commercial FTACPs. Firstly, the MALDI-TOF results
224
demonstrated that our FTACP contains 8:2 fluorotelomer appendages covalently bound to the
225
hydrocarbon backbone through an ester linkage. FTACs are the principle monomer used in the
226
preparation of commercial FTACPs,14,15 and have the same bonding of fluorotelomer appendages
227
to the polymer backbone. Secondly, the side-by-side configuration of the 8:2 fluorotelomer
228
appendages in our FTACP could render the ester moiety more sterically constrained than a
229
commercial FTACP, which have additional interspersed non-fluorinated monomers. The
230
presence of non-fluorinated monomers could affect the lability of the ester moieties making
231
commercial FTACPs more susceptible to microbial hydrolysis. Thus, our unique FTACP likely
232
represented a suitable experimental probe for assessing the lability of FTPs having moderate
233
molecular weights.
234
Indirect Analysis of FTACP Biodegradation. The observed intermediate and product
235
trends for FTACP/Soil, FTACP/Plant and FTACP/Plant/Biosolids are consistent with the
236
biotransformation of 8:2 FTOH to PFOA previously reported in aerobic soil,10,11 which suggests
237
either degradation of the unique FTACP or residual 8:2 FTOH or 8:2 FTAC. From the 50 mg of
238
unique FTACP spiked into each pot, the 8:2 FTOH equivalence was calculated to be 8.88 x 104
239
nmole using the Mn and Mw values as outlined in the SI. As described earlier, residual 8:2 FTOH
240
and 8:2 FTAC in the exhaustively purified FTACP material were estimated to be 4.71 and 2.63
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
10
Page 11 of 27
Environmental Science & Technology
241
nmole per gram of FTACP, which equates to as much as 0.236 and 0.132 nmole residual 8:2
242
FTOH and 8:2 FTAC per pot (Table 1). For the control pots, Soil Control and Plant/Biosolids
243
Control, PFOA was observed to have the highest background level at 5.87 and 36.5 nmole,
244
respectively. Therefore, the detection of intermediates and products, as much as 1800 nmole at
245
5.5 months, presumably resulted from the biotransformation of the unique FTACP and not from
246
the conversion of residuals.
247
FTACP biodegradation was inferred from the observed intermediates, 8:2 FTCA and 7:3
248
FTCA, 8:2 FTUCA and 7:3 FTUCA, and PFCA (C6-C9) products detected in soil, plant and
249
catch plate (Tables S6-S11). The inclusion of the stable intermediate 7:3 FTCA and terminal
250
PFCAs C6-C8 expands upon the conceptual model used by Russell et al. in their FTACP
251
biodegradation study,3 which solely considered the primary biotransformation of 8:2 FTOH to
252
PFOA via 8:2 FTOH 8:2 FTCA 8:2 FTUCA 7:2 secondary FTOH (sFTOH) PFOA.
253
Unfortunately, the analysis of 8:2 FTOH was omitted from our investigation as any volatile
254
products released from the soil and/or plants could not be quantified because the pots were
255
exposed to the open atmosphere of the greenhouse; thus the overall proportion of products, as
256
determined through indirect measurement, from FTACP degradation is likely reported here.
257
Incubation of the unique FTACP in all soil conditions resulted in the accumulation of
258
perfluorohexanoate (PFHxA), perfluoroheptanoate (PFHpA) and PFOA concurrently with the
259
reduction of 8:2 FTCA and 8:2 FTUCA as shown in Figure 2 for FTACP/Plant; similar trends
260
are illustrated in SI Figure S5 (FTACP/Soil) and S6 (FTACP/Plant/Biosolids). As expected,
261
PFOA was the dominant product constituting 57, 70 and 80% of products in all microcosm
262
compartments in FTACP/Soil, FTACP/Plant and FTACP/Plant/Biosolids, respectively (Table
263
S13). The formation of the stable intermediate 7:3 FTCA is consistent with transformation
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
11
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 12 of 27
264
pathways of 8:2 FTCA and 8:2 FTUCA observed in aerobic microbial degradation.29
265
Subsequent dealkylation and defluorination steps of 7:3 FTCA presumably explains the
266
production of perfluorohexanoate (PFHxA) and perfluoroheptanoate (PFHpA).30 The
267
accumulation of 7:3 FTCA, PFHxA and PFHpA varied depending on the experimental
268
conditions, but all were observed to be minor products. The α-oxidation of 8:2 FTOH to PFNA
269
has been reported with different mammalian hepatocytes,31-33 but at ≤1% of the total stable
270
products; PFNA was only observed within background levels in this study.
271
Measured concentration of target analytes in soil varied substantially amongst
272
FTACP/Soil, FTACP/Plant and FTACP/Plant/Biosolids (Table 1) and detailed in the SI (Table
273
S6 and S9), which suggests an influence between the degree of FTACP biodegradation and
274
probable microbial activity. At 5.5 months, the summed analytes level in FTACP/Soil,
275
FTACP/Plant and FTAC/Plant/Biosolids were determined to be 2.54 x 102 nmole, 6.94x 102
276
nmole and 1.80 x 103 nmole, respectively. Enhanced microbial activity has been demonstrated
277
to increase with plant production,34 and is consistent with the increase in analytes for
278
FTACP/Plant and FTACP/Plant/Biosolids. PFCAs and PFCA precursors arising from the
279
WWTP biosolids themselves were accounted for using a control experiment in biosolid amended
280
soil and an alfalfa plant (Plant/Biosolids Control), as described in the SI. The observed
281
concentrations in these controls were significantly lower than those reported for
282
FTACP/Plant/Biosolids.
283
Target analytes were also observed to increase in alfalfa plants throughout incubation.
284
Uptake into plants has previously been reported for PFOA and PFOS,35-37 consistent with the
285
increase of PFHxA, PFHpA and PFOA levels in the plant as observed in this study (Figure 2B
286
and S6B). Plant PFOA levels were observed up to 44.0 ± 12.7 nmole and 49.3 ± 12.9 nmole for
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
12
Page 13 of 27
Environmental Science & Technology
287
PFOA at 5.5 months for FTACP/Plant and FTAC/Plant/Biosolids (Table S7). The relative
288
percentage of PFCAs that translocated into the plant decreased with increasing PFCA chain
289
length (Table S12). Most intermediates in the plants fell below the LOD or were detected at
290
levels
325
FTACP/Plant ≈ FTACP/Plant/Biosolids).
326
The MALDI-TOF results were then re-plotted as a function of relative intensity with
327
respect to the most abundant signal; 1301 m/z. In FTACP/Soil pots, the relative signal
328
distribution 1.5, 3.5 and 5.5 months did not differ significantly (Figure 4A), whereas, an
329
increased contribution from the higher order fluorotelomer units resulted in a change in the
330
relative signal distribution from 1.5 to 3.5 and 5.5 months for FTACP/Plant and
331
FTACP/Plant/Biosolids pots (Figure 4B and 4C). Additionally, a greater increase in the Mn and
332
Mw was calculated from 1.5 to 3.5 and 5.5 months for FTACP/Plant and FTACP/Plant/Biosolid
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
14
Page 15 of 27
Environmental Science & Technology
333
pots (Table S17). Thus, an increase in the alteration of FTACPs having a lower molecular
334
weight (