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Environmental Processes
Sorption, Aerobic Biodegradation and Oxidation Potential of PFOS Alternatives Chlorinated Polyfluoroalkyl Ether Sulfonic Acids hong chen, Youn Jeong Choi, and Linda S Lee Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.8b02913 • Publication Date (Web): 12 Aug 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on August 14, 2018
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Sorption, Aerobic Biodegradation and Oxidation Potential of PFOS Alternatives
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Chlorinated Polyfluoroalkyl Ether Sulfonic Acids
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Hong Chen,
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†, ‡
‡
Youn Jeong Choi and Linda S. Lee
*,‡
5 †
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Key Laboratory of Coastal Ecology and Environment of State Oceanic
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Administration, Department of Marine Chemistry, National Marine Environmental
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Monitoring Center, Linghe Street 42, Dalian 116023, China
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‡
Ecological Science and Engineering, Department of Agronomy, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47907, USA
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*Corresponding author at: Department of Agronomy, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47907, USA, Tel.: +1 765 494 8612; fax: +1 765 496 2926 E-mail address:
[email protected] (L.S. Lee)
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Revision of es-2018-2913t for submission to Environmental Science & Technology July 27, 2018
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Graphical Abstract
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ABSTRACT
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Global phase out of perfluorooctane sulfonic acid (PFOS) has led to increasing
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production of alternatives such as the chlorinated polyfluoroalkyl ether sulfonic acids
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(Cl-PFESAs) for which little is known on their environmental fate. In this study,
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sorption by soils, aerobic soil biodegradation, and oxidation potential of 6:2
26
Cl-PFESA (9-chlorohexadecafluoro-3-oxanonane-1-sulfonate) and 8:2 Cl-PFESA
27
(9-chlorooctadecafluoro-3-oxanonane-1-sulfonate) were evaluated. 6:2 Cl-PFESA
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sorption was quantified for aqueous and acetone/water solutions whereas 8:2 PFESA
29
was could only be accurately measured in acetone/water solutions. The log-linear
30
cosolvency model was applied and validated to estimate sorption of 8:2 Cl-PFESA.
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Only soil organic carbon (OC, 0.76 - 4.30%) was highly and positively correlated to
32
sorption of the Cl-PFESAs (R2 > 0.96). The resulting log Koc values (OC-normalized
33
sorption coefficients) are 4.01 ± 0.09 (n = 6) and 5.54 ± 0.05 (n = 4) L kg-1 for 6:2
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Cl-PFESA and 8:2 Cl-PFESA, respectively. Aerobic biodegradation in a loam soil at
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24 ± 0.5 °C showed negligible degradation of both Cl-PFESAs. Cl-PFESAs also
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remained unchanged in an unbuffered heat (50 °C)-activated 42 mM persulfate
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oxidation treatment. Therefore, Cl-PFESAs are equally recalcitrant as PFOS in
38
addition to being more sorptive, thus with a higher bioaccumulation potential for a
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similar alkyl chain length.
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Keywords: F-53B; Cl-PFESAS; PFOS alternative; Soil; Persulfate Oxidation
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INTRODUCTION
Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs) are ubiquitous contaminants in the 1,2
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environment and in wildlife
primarily from the direct emissions from
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manufacturing facilities and use and disposal of PFAS-containing commercial
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products.3,4 In particular, perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) has received the most
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attention because of the persistency, long-range transport potential, bioaccumulation
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properties and developmental, reproductive, and immunotoxic effects.5-8 The highest
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annual production of PFOS was estimated to be 4650 tons.3 In 2009, PFOS was added
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to the Annex B of the Stockholm Convention for Persistent Organic Pollutants.9 With
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the pressure to ban and limit the use of PFOS, various alternatives are being produced,
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such as 6:2 fluorotelomer sulfonate (6:2 FTSA).10 However, these compounds must be
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used at higher concentrations to sufficiently lower surface-tension, which is
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paramount for covering the fuel to block oxygen access.10 Therefore, PFOS and its
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derivatives are still permitted in closed-loop systems of chrome plating in certain
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countries.11 China has been producing polyfluoroalkyl ether sulfonic acids (PFESAs)
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as a mist suppressant used in the chrome plating industry, under the trade name F-53B,
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since the 1970s12 with 20-30 tons produced annually.13 The major PFESA in F-53B is
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6:2 Cl-PFESA (9-chlorohexadecafluoro-3-oxanonane-1-sulfonate) with 8:2 Cl-PFESA
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(9-chlorooctadecafluoro-3-oxanonane-1-sulfonate) present as an impurity.8 Given
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their structure similarities (Table S1, graphical abstract) and similar physicochemical
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properties to PFOS, these PFESAs may be marketed as potential PFOS alternatives in
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commercial products, thus leading to their increased production and use.8,14 4
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Although PFESAs have been used for several decades, only recently have
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scientific studies on the emission, occurrence and behavior been initiated. Wang et
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al.14 were the first to evaluate the potential environmental toxicity of F-35B and the
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persistence and presence of 6:2 Cl-PFESA. They found high concentrations of 6:2
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Cl-PFESA in wastewater and surface water, which were not successfully removed by
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the wastewater treatment processess.14 Zebrafish assays showed F-53B to be
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moderately toxic14 and 6:2 Cl-PFESA was shown to interfere with the signaling of
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peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors much more than PFOS.15 Several studies
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investigated occurrence of Cl-PFESAs in surface water,14,16 drinking water, 17 sewage
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sludge,8 fish,13 frogs 18 and Greenland marine mammals.19 A few studies also included
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bioaccumulation and biomagnification of 6:2 Cl-PFESA in which it was found to be
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highly bioaccumulative in crucian carps,13 and biomagnify in the marine food chain 20
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as well as frogs at levels higher than PFOS.18 However, little to no information is
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available on sorption and biodegradation of Cl-PFESAs.
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Sorption and biodegradation are two important processes controlling the fate of
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organic compounds and their ecological risks in the environment. Based on available
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PFAS sorption data, sorption tends to be positively correlated to organic carbon (OC)
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content, but also appears to be influenced by clay content, pH and divalent
82
cations.21,22 Although Cl-PFESAs and PFOS have structural differences, they are
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similar with regards to components affecting sorption and model estimates of their
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octanol-water partition coefficients (Kow) for the acid forms;23 therefore, similar trends
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in sorption may be expected, but data are lacking. The two key structural differences 5
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between perfluoroalkyl sulfonates (e.g., PFOS) and Cl-PFESAs are the replacement
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of one fluorine atom with chlorine and the insertion of an oxygen atom into the
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Cl-fluoroalkyl chain (Table S2). The latter may make Cl-PFESAs more readily
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degradable than PFOS, which has not been shown to biodegrade, although limited
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biodegradability was observed for perfluoroalkyl ether carboxylic acids (e.g.,
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ADONA and GenX).24 In a study mimicking a wastewater treatment scenario and
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using biological oxygen demand as a measure of biodegradability, Cl-PFESAs did not
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appear biodegradable.14 However, such information is limited since Cl-PFESAs
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concentrations and potential metabolites were not monitored. The present work
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focuses on quantifying sorption and aerobic biodegradation in surface soils of 6:2 and
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8:2 Cl-PFESAs. High sorption of 8:2 Cl-PFESA from water would require small soil
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masses to large solution volumes leading to inaccuracy and substantial loss to
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experimental vessels. Therefore, the log linear cosolvency model was applied and
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validated for estimating aqueous sorption coefficients using 6:2 Cl-PFESA for a
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subset of soils as was done previously for a series of fluorotelomer alcohols.25 In
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addition, the overall chemical oxidative potential of Cl-PFESAs was evaluated using
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heat-activated persulfate oxidation. Heat-activated persulfate forms free sulfate
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radicals (SO4-·), which has a similar oxidation strength as hydroxyl radicals (·OH), EO
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= 2.6 eV and 2.7 eV, respectively; 26 however, SO4−· has been shown to be a more
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effective oxidant for perfluoroalkyl acids and their precursors. For example, PFOA
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was degraded by SO4−· but not by ·OH.27,28 Therefore, we chose SO4−· to investigate
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the potential for oxidation of our target compounds. To our knowledge, this study is 6
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the first to report the sorption and biodegradation in soil as well as chemical oxidation
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potential of novel PFESA analogues.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS
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Chemicals. 6:2 Cl-PFESA, 8:2 Cl-PFESA and M8PFOS used as an internal standard
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(isotopes were not available for the Cl-PFESAs), were purchased from Wellington
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Laboratories. Acetonitrile (ACN) and methanol (MeOH) were obtained from
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Sigma-Aldrich, with purity > 99%, HPLC grade. Inorganic chemicals including
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sodium persulfate (Na2S2O8), calcium chloride (CaCl2), ammonium acetate and acetic
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acid were of reagent-grade purity. ENVI-Carb powder (120-400 mesh, 100 m2/g) was
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from Sigma-Aldrich.
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Soils. Six surface soils varying in texture, pH, and OC content (Table S1) were used
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in the sorption experiments. Two soils from West Lafayette, IN, U.S.A included one
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sampled at the Purdue Student Farm (identified as PSF) immediately outside and area
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used for organic farming and another sampled from the Agronomy Center for
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Research and Education (identified as ARS) under a grassy area outside the
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commercial crop production area. The other four soils were from China sampled from
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a rice paddy (CPS), under a grassy area (CGS), in a forested area (CFS) and along a
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roadside (CRS). Soils were air-dried and homogenized (< 2 mm) before use except for
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a portion of the ARS soils, which was used in the biodegradation studies. For the latter,
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the soil was moist sieved (< 2 mm) and stored at 4 °C until the start of the
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biodegradation studies, which occurred within 3 months of sampling. 7
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Sorption isotherms. Sorption of the more soluble 6:2 Cl-PFESA was measured from
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both aqueous solutions and acetone/water solutions with volume fraction acetone (fc)
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of 0.1, 0.2, and 0.3 similar to what Liu et al.25,29 did for fluorotelomer alcohols. All
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solutions contained 0.01 N CaCl2. For 8:2 Cl-PFESA, high sorption to both PP and
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glass tubes (detailed in SI) led to sorption measurements from only acetone/water
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solutions (fc = 0.2, 0.3, and 0.4). Initial solute concentrations of 2, 5 and 10 µg/L were
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used in triplicates for each solution along with no chemical added soil controls in
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duplicate and no soil added in duplicate for each concentration). Soil to solution ratios
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ranged from 1:1 to 1:100 g:mL (detailed in Table S3) to target 20-80% sorption of the
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chemical mass applied. For the two soils with the lowest OC% (CFS and CRS) where
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sorption was the lowest, 6:2 Cl-PFESA sorption experiments were only conducted in
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aqueous solutions; sorption from acetone/water solutions required unrealistic soil
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mass to solution ratios to achieve at least 20% sorption. Soils were weighed into
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polypropylene (PP) tubes, chemical solutions added, and soil-solution slurries rotated
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end-over-end (40 rpm) at 24 ± 0.5 °C for 48 h which was deemed sufficient based on
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preliminary 5-d sorption tests in aqueous solutions for 6:2 Cl-PFESA. Sorption
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kinetics (approach to equilibrium) is faster in cosolvent-water solutions (log-linear
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increase in sorption rates with increasing fc).30 Sorbed concentrations were calculated
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by difference. Loss of Cl-PFESA mass by sorption to tubes or degradation for the
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solute-solvent combinations was negligible as will be discussed.
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Using solver in Excel, sorption isotherms were fit to the Freundlich sorption
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model, Cs = Kf CwN , where Cw (mg L-1) and Cs, (mg kg-1) are the solution and sorbed 8
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phase concentrations at equilibrium, Kf is the Freundlich sorption coefficient (mg1-N
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LNkg-1) and N (unitless) is a measure of isotherm nonlinearity, as well as the linear
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sorption model: Cs = Kd Cw
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coefficient. The aqueous-phase sorption coefficients were also extrapolated (log
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Kd,w,exp) from acetone/water solutions using the log-linear cosolvency model as
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illustrated for other compounds including fluorotelomer alcohols 25,29: log Kd,mix = log
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Kd,w,exp – ασc fc where σc and α are the cosolvency power and solvent-sorbet
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interaction terms, respectively.
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Degradation studies. Aerobic biodegradation studies were conducted using methods
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similar to those described by Liu et al.31 Briefly, soil (10 g air-dried weight) used
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within 3 months of field collection was added to sterile 125-mL amber glass serum
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bottles capped with butyl rubber aluminum crimp caps, wetted to approximately 75%
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field capacity using sterile water, and pre-incubated at 24 ± 0.5 °C in the dark for 7
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days. The field capacity for ARS soil was estimated to be 29.1% by A&L Labs
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(Lincoln, Nebraska), thus soil moisture content for the biodegradation study was
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~22%. After pre-incubation, concentrated 6:2 Cl-PFESA and 8:2 Cl-PFESA solutions
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(200 µg/mL) prepared in 1, 4-dioxane were added and mixed manually into each
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microcosm to give an initial concentration of 100 µg/kg soil. Sterile soil controls were
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prepared after the pre-incubation period by autoclaving three times at 103.4 KPa and
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121 °C for 2 h with one day in between the 1st and 2nd autoclave event and 2 days
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between the 2nd and last autoclave event.32, 33 At each sampling date over a 105-d
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period, samples were sacrificed for extraction in triplicate for the microbially active
or mix
where Kd,w
or mix
(L kg-1) is the linear sorption
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microcosms and in duplicate for autoclave-sterilized controls. Headspace O2 and CO2
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levels were measured to confirm aerobic conditions and biological activity by
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drawing 5-mL of headspace from microcosms using a needle syringe, and injecting on
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an Agilent 7890A gas chromatograph (GC) with a thermal conductivity detector
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(TCD).
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Sample extraction and extract clean-up. Soil microcosms in the aerobic
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degradation study were extracted three times sequentially using 20 mL ACN followed
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by two extractions with 20 mL of 90/10 v/v ACN/200 mM NaOH, which is based on
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the method from previous report with slight modifications.8 After each solvent
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addition, samples were sonicated at 45 °C for 60 min, centrifuged at 1400 rpm for 30
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min (385 g), and supernatants transferred and combined into a single PP tube for each
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microcosm. Clean-up of the combined extracts consisted of adding 1250 µL extract
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into a 2-mL microcentrifuge tube with approximately 10 mg of ENVI-Carb powder
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acidified with 75 µL of glacial acetic acid, vortexing, and centrifuging at 14,000 g for
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20 min. The isotope mass-labeled PFOS (25 ng) used for an internal standard was
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added immediately prior to HPLC-MS/MS analysis. Recoveries for 6:2 Cl-PFESA
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and 8:2 Cl-PFESA in the soil extraction and clean-up step were 91.8 ± 1.6 % and 87.8
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± 3.7 %, respectively (Table S2).
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Heat-activated persulfate oxidation studies. Persulfate (S2O82-) is a strong oxidant
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that when heat-activated forms free sulfate radicals (SO4−·) that has been shown to
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degrade several PFASs including perfluoroalkyl carboxylates and telomere-based
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perfluoroalkyl compounds.27,28,34 Persulfate oxidation of PFASs increases with 10
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increasing temperature,34, 35 increasing S2O82- concentration,34 and decreasing pH.34-36
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In unbuffered solutions, pH is acidic 28 and continues to decreases as S2O82- produces
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SO4−·. For example, at 50 °C with 42 mM Na2S2O8 in unbuffered solutions, more than
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50% of PFOA and 6:2 fluorotelomer sulfate degraded in less than 24 h.34 Therefore,
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the latter conditions (42 mM Na2S2O8 , 50 °C, unbuffered solutions) were used to
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explore the oxidation potential of 6:2 Cl-PFESA and 8:2 Cl-PFESA.34 Although
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higher temperatures would increase degradation rates, we chose 50 °C so if
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degradation occurred, we would be able to measure transformation intermediates.
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Individual Cl-PFESA reactions were done in 14-mL Pyrex centrifuge tubes with
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Teflon-lined screw-type caps with Na2S2O8 solutions prepared with 18 MΩ water and
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stored at 4 °C prior to use. Cl-PFESAs prepared individually in methanol was
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aliquoted to tubes and the methanol evaporated prior to adding 6 mL of Na2S2O8
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solution resulting in an initial Cl-PFESA concentration of 100 µg/L. Reaction tubes
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were placed in a temperature-controlled water bath at 50 °C for a total of 50 h.
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No-oxidant controls were prepared similarly except using 6-mL 18 MΩ water. At each
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sampling time (0, 4, 9, 25, 50 h), duplicate reaction and control tubes were placed in
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an ice bath and 6-mL methanol added. After coming to room temperature, a 1-mL
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aliquot for each sample was transferred to an HPLC vial and the internal standard (25
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ng) added prior to HPLC-MS/MS analysis. Measured Cl-PFESA concentrations in
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controls at 0 h were designated as the initial Cl-PFESA concentration.
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HPLC-MS/MS analysis. Aqueous solutions and acetone/water solutions were diluted
217
1:1 with methanol before analysis. Quantification of 6:2 Cl-PFESA and 8:2 11
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Cl-PFESA was performed on a Shimadzu HPLC system with a gradient elution at 0.2
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mL/min through a Kinetex C18 column (50 × 4.6 mm, 2.6 µm) coupled to an Applied
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Biosystems Sciex API 3000 tandem mass spectrometer (MS/MS) in negative
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electrospray ionization (ESI) mode. The mobile phase consisted of 0.15% acetic acid
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in water (A) and 20 mM ammonium acetate in methanol (B) starting at 30% B,
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increased to 100% B in 6 min and maintained for 2 min, decreased to 30% B in 0.5
224
min, and maintained at 30% B for 4.5 min. Injection volumes were 20 µL. M8PFOS
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used as an internal standard was added to each vial immediately prior to HPLC
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analysis. Concentrations were estimated using internal standard (M8PFOS) corrected
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Cl-PFESA calibration curves prepared in 1:1 v:v MeOH:water.
228 229
RESULTS & DISCUSSION
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Sorption of 6:2 and 8:2 Cl-PFESA by soils. Sorption isotherms for 6:2 and 8:2
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Cl-PFESA are shown in Fig. 1 and 2 with linear model fits. Coefficients for linear and
232
Freundlich sorption model fits are summarized in Tables S4-S7. Freundlich N values
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ranged from 0.80 ± 0.09 to 1.09 ± 0.15 with regression correlation coefficients (R2)
234
ranging from 0.971 to 1.000 (Tables S6 and S7). No consistent trend in nonlinearity
235
was apparent between compounds or with increasing cosolvent across soils being
236
negligible. This range in nonlinearity is similar to what has been observed for PFOS
237
sorption in aqueous solutions.21 All sorption isotherms were also reasonably
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well-fitted by the linear sorption model as well with R2 values ranging from 0.963 to
239
0.999 (Tables S4 and S5 and shown in Fig. 1 and 2). Therefore, the linear Kd values 12
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were used in the log-linear cosolvency model, which resulted in very good log-linear
241
correlations with R2 > 0.998 for both Cl-PFESAs on all four soils (Fig. 3).
242 243 244 245 246 247
Figure 1. Sorption isotherms for 6:2 Cl-PFESA from acetone/water solutions (fc = 0.0, 0.1, 0.2 and 0.3 for four soils (PSF, ARS, CPS and CGS) and from only aqueous solution (fc = 0.0) in two soils (CFS and CRS). % OC of soils follows: ARS > PSF > CGS > CPA > CFS > CRS (Table 1).
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Figure 2. Sorption isotherms for 8:2 Cl-PFESA from acetone/water solutions (fc = 0.2, 0.3 and 0.4 in four soils (PSF, ARS, CPS and CGS). % OC of soils follows: ARS > PSF > CGS > CPA > CFS > CRS (Table 1).
253
For 6:2 Cl-PFESA, Kd,w (L kg-1) values measured directly from aqueous solutions
254
ranged between 77 and 435 L kg-1 (log Kd,w 2.07 to 2.64). The values extrapolated
255
from acetone/water solutions (log Kd,w,ext) resulted in a similar range 2.26 to 2.73, but
256
consistently higher than measured log Kd,w (Fig. 3A and Table 1) by 0.04 to 0.41 log
257
units. However, differences are less than 0.2 log units for 3 of the 4 soils, thus overall,
258
log Kd,w and log Kd,w,ext values agree reasonably well supporting the application of the
259
log-linear cosolvency model for estimating aqueous sorption coefficients for 8:2
260
Cl-PFESA for which sorption from pure aqueous solutions could not be measured
261
reliably. The resulting log Kd,w,ext values for 8:2 Cl-PFESA ranged between 3.69 and
262
4.18, which are 1.52 ± 0.16 log units higher than observed for 6:2 Cl-PFESA across
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soils. The difference between 8:2 and 6:2 PFESA translated to 0.76 ± 0.08 log units 14
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greater sorption per CF2 group, which is similar to the increase in sorption of 0.87 ±
265
0.12 log units per CF2 group observed by Liu et al. 25 for a series of fluorotelomer
266
alcohols. This is also consistent with those for both the perfluorosulfonates and the
267
perfluorocarboxylates (0.5-1 log units),21,37,38 and that for the 6:2 and 8:2
268
fluorotelomer sulfonate (FtS) homologues (0.41 ± 0.059).39 Likewise, the difference
269
between the log Kow values predicted using EPA EPI Suite KOWWIN for 6:2 and 8:2
270
Cl-PFESA of 5.24 and 6.58, respectively (Table S2), is similar (0.67 log units per CF2
271
group).
272
273 274 275 276 277 278
Figure 3. Log-linear relationship between sorption coefficients in acetone/water solutions (Kd,mix) and volume fraction acetone (fc) measured from four soils for (A) 6:2 Cl-PFESA along with those measured directly from aqueous solutions (open symbols) and (B) 8:2 Cl-PFESA. The solid lines are the linear regression fits of log Kd, mix versus fc and the dotted lines are the regressions extrapolated to fc = 0 to estimate the aqueous sorption coefficient (log Kd, w, ext).
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Table 1. Extrapolated (exp) log Kd,w,ext and associated cosolvency parameters (-ασc) for 6:2 Cl-PFESA and 8:2 Cl-PFESA determined by applying the log-linear cosolvency model to sorption measured from acetone/water solutions and the log Kd,w directly measured from aqueous solutions for 6:2 Cl-PFESA. soil
-ασ
log Kd,w,ext
R2
log Kd,w
log Koca
log Koc exta
-ασ
6:2 Cl-PFESA
283
log Kd,w,exta
R2
log Koc,exta
8:2 Cl-PFESA
PSF
7.42 (0.58)
2.68 (0.12)
0.994
2.64
ARS
7.33 (0.38)
2.73 (0.083)
0.997
2.54
4.01 ± 0.09
CPS
8.67 (0.38)
2.26 (0.081)
0.998
2.07
(n = 6)
CGS 8.13 (0.021) 2.63 (0.004)
0.999
2.22
11.4 (1.27)
3.94 (0.40)
0.988
4.24 ± 0.17
11.0 (0.14)
4.18 (0.04)
0.999
5.54 ± 0.05
(n = 4)
10.9(0.60)
3.69 (0.18)
0.997
(n = 4)
10.8 (0.57)
3.72 (0.18)
0.997
a
Log normal averages
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The cosolvency power (σc) of acetone for Cl-PFESAs. The values for ασc (slopes of
285
log Kd,mix versus a fc in Table 1) of acetone on 6:2 Cl-PFESA and 8:2 Cl-PFESA
286
sorption are 7.88 ± 0.53 and 11.0 ± 0.31 across the four soils, respectively. For
287
comparison, similar sorption studies with fluorotelomer alcohols (FTOHs) in acetone
288
water solutions resulted in ασc values of 7.15 ± 0.11 (n=5) and 11.4 ± 0.35 (n=4) for
289
8:2 and 10:2 FTOH, respectively.25,29 The α term (solvent-sorbent interaction) is
290
typically close to unity as observed for FTOHS (α = 1.02 ± 0.01 and 1.02 ± 0.02 for
291
8:2 FTOH and 10:2 FTOH, respectively); 25,29 therefore, ασc is good approximation of
292
the cosolvency power.
293
occur for both the PFESAs and the FTOHSs with ≈ 3.1 and 3.2 unit increase,
294
respectively. Increases in σc with increase molecular size (as reflected in increasing
295
log Kow) have been observed for other hydrophobic compounds.40 Therefore the
296
cosolvency power of acetone for 6:2 Cl-PFESA was higher than that for 8:2
297
Cl-PFESA, suggesting the increasing cosolvency power with increasing carbon-chain
298
length of the solute due to the increasing hydrophobicity.
299
Impact of soil properties on sorption for Cl-PFESAs. For both 6:2 and 8:2
300
Cl-PFESAs sorption was found to be strongly and positively correlated to OC fraction
301
(foc) (Fig. 4). Therefore, OC-normalized sorption coefficients (Koc = Kd/foc) were
302
calculated using Kd,w values for 6:2 Cl-PFESA and Kd,w,exp for 8:2 Cl-PFESA yielding
303
log Koc values of 4.01 ± 0.09 L kgoc-1 (n = 6, R2 = 0.964) and 5.54 ± 0.05 L kgoc-1 (n =
304
4, R2 = 0.968), respectively. This log Koc for 6:2 Cl-PFESA is at least one order of
305
magnitude higher than has been reported for PFOS (e.g., log Koc 2.57 ± 0.13 L kg-1for
Similar increases in ασc with the addition of two CF2 groups
17
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PFOS determined on 4 sediments with 1.02 – 9.66% OC and pH 5.7 – 7.6).21
307
Although both PFOS and 6:2 Cl-PFESA have the same number of carbons, the
308
replacement of one F atom by the larger Cl atom and the addition of an oxygen atom
309
makes 6:2 Cl-PFESA have a larger molecular volume than PFOS (407.91 – 413.61 Å
310
compared to 381.77 Å), which contributes to the greater sorption.14,23 Therefore, 6:2
311
Cl-PFESA, a current PFOS alternative in the chrome plating industry, will be less
312
mobile, but more bioaccumulative than PFOS.13, 18
313 314 315
Figure 4. Relationship between soil-water distribution coefficients (Kd values) for 6:2 Cl-PFESA measured directly from aqueous solutions and 8:2 Cl-PFESA extrapolated from acetone/water solutions and the fraction of soil organic carbon.
316 317
Some previous reports have found statistically significant relationships between 30, 41, 42
318
sorption of PFASs and OC%
consistent with our findings while other studies
319
found OC to be insufficient as a strong predictor alone of sorption in some PFAS-soil
320
combinations.43-45, 39, 46 In a critical analysis of literature data, Li et al.22 showed that
321
sorption was significantly correlated with OC% and clay content for several PFASs
322
and in some cases statistically significant correlations with soil OC% and pH were 18
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noted. Other than OC, we did not see any meaningful correlations between sorption of
324
the Cl- PFESAs and other soil properties including clay content, pH, and cation
325
exchange capacity (Table S8 and Fig. S1). The estimated pKa values for Cl-PFESAs
326
are very low (≤ 0.14)23 thus exist almost exclusively as organic anions in the
327
environment. For organic anions, electrostatic interaction would be primarily to
328
positively charged sites, which tend to be present in more acidic soils, or potentially
329
through cation bridging to cation exchange sites.47 Previous reports found that
330
contribution of electrostatic interactions to PFAS sorption increased when %OC
70% of ambient O2 levels for the first ten days. CO2 content increased
336
continuously from 0.6 % to 8.5% indicating active aerobic microbial reaction in the
337
system. Bottles were re-aerated weekly to ensure adequate O2 levels. The degradation
338
profiles for 6:2 Cl-PFESA and 8:2 Cl-PFESA in the ARS soil are shown in Fig. 5.
339
Mass recoveries slightly decreased over time except one data point for 8:2 Cl-PFESA
340
and averaged over time for 6:2 Cl-PFESA and 8:2 Cl-PFESA in autoclave-sterilized
341
soil are 87.3 ± 3.6% and 92.8 ± 8.2%, respectively, while the recoveries in live soil
342
are 89.9 ± 7.3% and 89.1 ± 7.2%, respectively. Comparing the mass recoveries
343
between live soil and auto-clave soil, it was concluded that no significant
344
biotransformation of 6:2 Cl-PFESA and 8:2 Cl-PFESA occurred during the 105-d 19
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period in this soil.
346
347 348 349 350 351 352
Figure 5. Aerobic degradation of (A) 6:2 Cl-PFESA and (B) 8:2 Cl-PFESA in soil sampled immediately under a grassy area outside a commercial crop production area from the Agronomy Center for Research and Education (identified as soil ARS) in West Lafayette, IN, U.S.A in microbially active soils compared to autoclave-sterilized soil.
353 354
Persulfate oxidation for Cl-PFESAs. No heat-activated persulfate oxidation of 6:2
355
Cl-PFESA or 8:2 Cl-PFESA was observed with 42 mM persulfate at 50 °C over a
356
50-h period. 95.1 ± 3.5% versus 96.8 ± 3.3% 6:2 Cl-PFESA and 100.7 ± 3.1% versus
357
97.3 ± 6.4% 8:2 Cl-PFESA remained in the persulfate treated samples and controls,
358
respectively (Fig. 6). The pH of unbuffered 42 mM persulfate was ≈3.5 and decreased
359
during the reaction to a pH of ≈2 by 50 h. Similar results were observed for PFOS in
360
previous studies, whereas perfluoroalkyl carboxylates are easily oxidized by
361
heat-activated persulfate.34 The inability for persulfate radicals to attack both
362
Cl-PFESAs is an additional evidence that Cl-PFESAs will be persistent similar to
363
PFOS.
20
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364 365 366
Figure 6. Heat-activated persulfate oxidation profiles of 6:2 Cl-PFESA (A) and 8:2 Cl-PFESA (B) at 50 °C in unbuffered solutions.
367 368
ENVIRONMENTAL IMPLICATIONS
369
Earlier research has shown that the estimated annual riverine discharge in China of
370
6:2 Cl-PFESA (0.2-6.9 t/y) was comparable to that of PFOS (1.4-11.0 t/y),16
371
indicating an emerging, significant amount of Cl-PFESAs are being used in
372
fluoropolymer manufacturing. With more stringent regulations on PFOS use, it is
373
reasonable to assume that the production and usage of Cl-PFESAs as a PFOS
374
alternative will continue to increase. The present study’s findings of more than an
375
order of magnitude higher sorption affinity of Cl-PFESAs than PFOS and strong
376
recalcitrance to biological and chemical degradation similar to PFOS together with
377
Cl-PFESA’s moderate toxicity and high bioaccumulation ability,13,14 Cl-PFESAs as an
378
alternative to PFOS should be treated cautiously.
379 380
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
381
This work was funded by the China Scholarship Council; the National Natural 21
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Science Foundation of China, DuPont’s Center for Collaborative Research and
383
Education in Wilmington, DE; the Department of Agronomy at Purdue University;
384
and the USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture Hatch Funds Accession No.
385
1006516.
386 387
SUPPORTING INFORMATION
388
The Supporting Information is available free of charge on the ACS Publications
389
website at DOI:
390 391
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