Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances in Representative
Fluorocarbon Surfactants Used in Chinese Film-Forming Foams: Levels,
Profile Shift, and Environmental Implications
posted on 2019-04-25, 00:00authored byMehvish Mumtaz, Yixiang Bao, Liquan Liu, Jun Huang, Giovanni Cagnetta, Gang Yu
China is among the largest producers
and consumers of aqueous firefighting
foams that contain fluorocarbon surfactants. Despite global phase-out
initiatives of long chain “C8” perfluoroalkyl chemicals,
perfluorooctanesulfonate is not banned yet in China. However, some
manufacturers are voluntarily developing and producing short chain
alternative fluorosurfactant products for foreign markets. Quantification
of perfluoroalkyl substances and their precursors (by total oxidizable
precursor assay) in fluorosurfactants used for the preparation of
aqueous film-forming foams in China demonstrates that perfluorooctanesulfonate
and perfluorooctanoate are still significantly present in certain
domestic products. However, such compounds, as well as the other long
chain homologues, are not detected in alternative products (produced
in China for use abroad). In particular, such products are based on
telomerization and seem to evolve toward smaller amounts of fluorinated
chemicals and shorter chain fluoroalkyl compounds. These findings
imply that in China a rapid and cost-effective transition from long
chain-based aqueous film-forming foams to the short chain ones is
possible. This might result in a reduction of environmental and human
health risks not only in China but also in the wider world.