Perfluoroalkyl acid transformation and mitigation by nNiFe-activated carbon nanocomposites in steady-state flow column studies


Linda S. Lee , Mahsa Modiri-Gharehveran , Younjeong Choi , Jenny E. Zenobio

DOI:10.1016/j.jes.2022.06.040

Received March 19, 2022,Revised , Accepted June 29, 2022, Available online July 08, 2022

Volume 35,2023,Pages 678-687

The ongoing contamination of groundwater with per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) has resulted in a global and rapidly growing interest in PFAS groundwater remediation. Preferred technologies that lead to PFAS destruction are often limited by not addressing all PFAS, being energy-intensive or not being suited for in-situ application. We developed nNiFe-activated carbon (AC) nanocomposites and demonstrated varying degrees of PFAS reduction and fluoride generation with these nanocomposites in batch reactors for several PFAS. Here we explore nNiFe-AC's effectiveness to transform perfluoroalkyl acid acids (PFAAs) under steady-state flow (0.0044 to 0.15 mL/min) in nNiFe-AC:sand packed columns. Column experiments included, two perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) in deionized water and two PFAA mixtures in deionized water or bicarbonate buffer containing five perfluoroalkyl carboxylates (PFCAs, C5-C9) and three perfluoroalkyl sulfonates (PFSAs, C4, C6 and C8) at temperatures of 50 or 60°C were evaluated. PFOS transformation was similar in PFOS-only and PFAA mixture column experiments. Overall, % PFAA transformation under flow conditions exceeded what we observed previously in batch reactors with up to 53% transformation of a PFAA mixture with ∼ 8% defluorination. Longer chain PFAS dominated the PFAAs transformed and a bicarbonate matrix appeared to reduce overall transformation. PFAA breakthrough was slower than predicted from only sorption due to transformation; some longer chain PFAS like PFOS did not breakthrough. Here, nNiFe-AC technology with both in-situ and ex-situ potential application was shown to be a plausible part of a treatment train needed to address the ongoing challenge for cleaning up PFAS-contaminated waters.

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