posted on 2022-07-19, 16:06authored byJordin Metz, Pengxiao Zuo, Bo Wang, Michael S. Wong, Pedro J. J. Alvarez
While per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) are
recalcitrant
to chemical reactions traditionally used in water treatment, we report
the novel finding that combining ultraviolet (UV, 254 nm) light and
chlorine can promote perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) degradation. About
12% removal of 100 μg/L PFOA was observed after 30 min of irradiation
(6.5 × 10–6 Einstein L–1 s–1) in the presence of 1.4 mM (106 mg/L) NaOCl, compared
to only 1% removal by UV photolysis and no removal by NaOCl alone.
UV/chlorine with 0.02 mM NaOCl (1.5 mg/L, a more common dose for water
treatment) removed 6 μg/L PFOA within 30 min. To better detect
defluorination, 50 mg/L PFOA was used, and UV/chlorine released significantly
more fluoride (382 μg/L) than UV photolysis (0 μg/L) and
dark controls (0 μg/L) over 30 min. By 60 min, this represents
32% of the maximum possible defluorination for the amount of PFOA
removed by UV/chlorine versus 2% for UV photolysis. Radical scavenger
tests indicated that Cl• and Cl2•– play a crucial role in PFOA degradation, which
we postulate is initiated by electron abstraction leading to a decarboxylation–hydroxylation–elimination–hydrolysis
pathway. Whereas reaction rates were relatively slow for practical
application in water treatment plants, these results underscore overlooked
reactions with common water treatment constituents that may influence
the fate of PFAS.