4.7 Article

Revealing the Molecular-Level Interactions between Cationic Fluorinated Polymer Sorbents and the Major PFAS Pollutant PFOA

Journal

MACROMOLECULES
Volume 55, Issue 3, Pages 1077-1087

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.macromol.1c02435

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Australian Research Council [CE140100036, DP0987407, DP110104299, DP130103774, DP180101221, DP210101496, LE0775684, LE0668517, LE0882357]
  2. National Health and Medical Research Council [APP1157440, APP1021759, APP1046831, APP1107723, APP1158026]
  3. University of Queensland [UQFEL1831361]

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This study demonstrates the importance of fluorine-fluorine and electrostatic interactions in the effective sorption of PFOA, a PFAS molecule, from aqueous solutions. Sorbents containing both fluorinated and cationic groups show higher removal efficiency, with electrostatic attraction dominating when the sorbent is highly charged. These findings provide insights for designing novel sorbents for rapid and efficient PFAS removal.
The development of new technologies for the removal of a family of manufactured chemicals, the per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), from the environment is urgently needed to safeguard public and environmental health. Here we report a fundamental study of the binding mechanisms driven by fluorine-fluorine and electrostatic interactions between perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA), an important PFAS molecule, and three types of block copolymer sorbents containing individually perfluoropolyether (PFPE) or quaternized ammonium groups, or both functional segments in combination. The results show that both the fluorine-fluorine interactions between the PFPE segment of the block copolymer and the fluorinated tail of the PFOA as well as electrostatic attraction between the quaternized ammonium group and the anionic PFOA headgroup are crucial to achieve effective PFOA sorption from aqueous solutions. The fluorine-fluorine interactions contribute to recognition of PFOA molecules via fluorophilicity, with fast exchange between bound and free PFOA being observed, while the electrostatic interactions can tightly bind PFOA, thus precluding such exchange. Both types of interaction are observed to be rapidly established within 5 min. We show that the sorbents containing both fluorinated and cationic groups have a higher PFOA removal efficiency with potentially improved sorption capacity compared with the sorbents with a single functional group and that the electrostatic attraction is stronger and dominates the fluorine-fluorine interactions when the sorbent is highly charged. Overall, these results provide important insights into designing novel sorbents for rapid and efficient PFAS removal from contaminated environments.

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