posted on 2023-10-06, 11:04authored byBiting Qiao, Dongbao Song, Bo Fang, Hao Yu, Xiao Li, Leicheng Zhao, Yiming Yao, Lingyan Zhu, Hao Chen, Hongwen Sun
Wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) are typical point
sources of
per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) released into the environment.
The suspect and nontarget screening based on gas chromatography or
liquid chromatography-high resolution mass spectrometry were performed
on atmosphere, wastewater, and sludge samples collected from two WWTPs
in Tianjin to discover emerging PFAS and their fate in this study.
A total of 40 PFAS (14 neutral and 26 ionic) and 64 PFAS were identified
in the atmosphere and wastewater/sludge, respectively, among which
5 short-chain perfluoroalkyl sulfonamide derivatives, 4 ionic PFAS,
and 15 aqueous film-forming foam-related cationic or zwitterionic
PFAS have rarely or never been reported in WWTPs in China. Active
air sampling is more conducive to the enrichment of emerging PFAS,
while passive sampling is inclined to leave out some ultrashort-chain
PFAS or unstable transformation intermediates. Moreover, most precursors
and intermediates could be enriched in the atmosphere at night, while
the PFAS associated with aerosols with high water content or particles
enter the atmosphere easily during the day. Although most emerging
PFAS could not be eliminated efficiently in conventional treatment
units, deep bed filtration and advanced oxidation processes could
partly remove some emerging precursors.