Simulated leaching of PFAS from land-applied municipal biosolids at agricultural sites.

J Contam Hydrol

Civil & Environmental Engineering Department, Hydrologic Science & Engineering Program, Colorado School of Mines, Golden, CO, United States of America.

Published: December 2022

Biosolids are an important resource for agricultural practice but have recently received increased focus as a potential source of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) in the environment. Few studies have investigated the transport of PFAS through the unsaturated zone under conditions relevant to biosolids application sites. Herein, the unsaturated flow and transport model HYDRUS is used to evaluate the leaching of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) from land-applied biosolids used in agricultural practice to determine the impacts of PFAS leaching on underlying groundwater resources. This numerical case study was based on conditions and operations at two test sites in central Illinois where biosolids were applied at agronomic rates and where PFAS contents and desorption characteristics were previously characterized. Each site possessed different vadose zone soil textural heterogeneity. Simulations were performed under actual present-day meteorological conditions and extended 150 years beyond the initial biosolids application. These long-term simulations demonstrate how soil equilibrium sorption/desorption processes within the biosolids-amended surface soils effectively control the transport rate of individual PFAS to groundwater. Air-water interfacial (AWI) adsorption, which is sometimes considered to be a significant source of PFAS retention in vadose zone soils, was observed to have minimal impacts on PFAS leaching rates within the biosolids-amended surface soils at these sites. Additionally, the impact of AWI adsorption was found to be most significant for PFAS transport within the underlying vadose zone soils when these soils were more texturally homogeneous and considerably less significant within the texturally heterogeneous soils represented herein. The results of multiple long-term simulations were used to develop an empirical equation that relates predicted maximum PFAS pore-water concentrations reaching the saturated zone with changes in PFAS concentrations in the biosolids-amended soil for various biosolids re-application events. This approach is shown to be very useful in developing site-specific PFAS soil screening levels and/or maximum leachate levels for PFAS in support of establishing best management practices (BMPs) for land application of biosolids.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jconhyd.2022.104089DOI Listing

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