Widespread concerns have been raised due to the ever-increasing number of novel per- and polyfluoroalkyl acids (PFAAs) and the ever-decreasing level of legacy PFAAs. Most analytical methods for PFAAs suffer from a narrow range of analyzable PFAAs, insufficient sensitivity, poor performance for oil samples, and defective quantification without internal standards or blank matrices. To solve these challenges, a highly selective method for multiple PFAAs from oils and food contact materials (FCMs) was developed based on nonaqueous electroextraction (NE). Through theoretical derivation and experimental investigation, the selectivity of NE was discovered to be tunable, and the range of extractable analytes could be tuned by adjusting the dielectric constant of the sample solution. For PFAAs, the selectivity was attributed to the p-based differential migration mechanism, as PFAAs exhibited less variable p values in different solvents compared to interference components. The method achieved nonmatrix-matched calibration without internal standards and integration of sample cleanup, selective extraction, and exhaustive enrichment into a fast and convenient operation. The method provided low limits of detection (0.002-0.03 μg·kg), satisfactory accuracy (88.0-107.8%), and RSDs (<11.7%). Migration experiments from 33 FCMs to oils were further investigated. PFBS (<0.05-2.34 μg·kg) and PFBA (<0.2-0.398 μg·kg) were detected from most FCMs. This was the first attempt at PFAA analysis as well as oil sample analysis using an electric field-assisted extraction technique and also the first report on PFAA migration from FCMs into edible oils.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.analchem.2c02727DOI Listing

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