4.2 Article

Fluorine Mass Balance Analysis of Effluent and Sludge from Nordic Countries

Journal

ACS ES&T WATER
Volume 1, Issue 9, Pages 2087-2096

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsestwater.1c00168

Keywords

fluorine mass balance analysis; per- and polyfluorinated substances; sludge; effluent; extractable organofluorine

Funding

  1. Nordic Chemical Group
  2. Swedish Research Council FORMAS [2016-01158]
  3. Knowledge Foundation (KKS)
  4. Enforce Research Profile, Sweden [20160019]
  5. Formas [2016-01158] Funding Source: Formas

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Recent studies have shown that a substantial amount of unidentified organofluorine compounds is being released back into the environment, posing potential risks to both human health and the environment.
Recent publications have highlighted the ubiquitous presence of unidentified organofluorine compounds, whose environmental occurrence is poorly understood. In this study, wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) effluent and sludge samples from seven countries were analyzed for extractable organofluorine (EOF) and target PFAS, to evaluate which compounds are released back into the environment. Fluorine mass balance analysis of effluent samples (n = 14) revealed that on average 90% of the EOF could not be explained by the 73 PFAS monitored in this investigation. The levels of EOF in effluent (324-1460 ng of F/L) and sludge (39-210 ng of F/g of dry weight) indicate that a substantial amount of organofluorine compounds is released back into nature. A commonly overlooked PFAS class, ultra-short-chain PFCAs, accounted for 4% of EOF on average, while the remaining 71 compounds explained only a further 6% of EOF on average. The highest number of PFAS was detected in the effluent dissolved phase (37), compared to 29 and 23 PFAS in sludge and effluent particulate phase, respectively. The increased concentrations of EOF in both WWTP effluent and sludge are of concern, as the chemical species contained therein remain largely unknown, and thus, their potential health and environmental risks cannot be assessed.

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