AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study assessed how selective certain drinking water-related PFAS compounds are for chloride ions using three types of anion exchange resins, focusing on low concentrations relevant to drinking water (≤500 ng/L).
  • - Results showed that most PFAS behaved according to traditional ion exchange principles, with selectivity increasing with both PFAS carbon chain length and chloride concentrations, while maintaining a much higher selectivity than inorganic anions like nitrate.
  • - A competition experiment confirmed that selectivity values for individual PFAS could be used in a multisolute context, paving the way for improved models in water treatment processes involving PFAS.

Article Abstract

Selectivity with respect to chloride () was determined for nine drinking water relevant perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS): perfluoro-2-propoxypropanoic acid (GenX), five perfluoroalkyl carboxylic acids (PFCAs), and three perfluoroalkyl sulfonic acids (PFSAs). Three single-use strong base anion exchange gel resins were investigated, targeting drinking water relevant equilibrium PFAS liquid concentrations (≤500 ng/L). Except for the longest carbon chain PFCA (perfluorodecanoic acid) and PFSA (perfluorooctanesulfonic acid) studied, PFAS followed traditional ion exchange theory (law of mass action), including increasing equilibrium PFAS liquid concentrations with increasing equilibrium chloride liquid concentrations. Overall, values were (i) similar among resins for a given PFAS, (ii) 1-5 orders of magnitude greater than the selectivity of inorganic anions (e.g., nitrate) previously studied, (iii) 2 orders of magnitude greater for the same carbon chain length PFSA versus PFCA, (iv) found to proportionally increase with carbon chain length for both PFSAs and PFCAs, and (v) similar for GenX and perfluorohexanoic acid (six-carbon PFCA). A multisolute competition experiment demonstrated binary isotherm-determined values could be applied to simulate a multisolute system, extending work previously done with only inorganic anions to PFAS. Ultimately, estimated values allow future extension and validation of an open-source anion exchange column model to PFAS.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10829541PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsestwater.3c00396DOI Listing

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