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Adsorption of PFAS onto secondary microplastics: A mechanistic study
Summary
Researchers studied how PFAS (toxic "forever chemicals") attach to microplastics that form when PET water bottles break down in the environment. They found that PFAS bonds to these microplastic surfaces within hours in both fresh and salt water, meaning microplastics can act as carriers for these harmful chemicals. This is concerning because people may be exposed to both microplastics and the dangerous chemicals hitchhiking on them through contaminated water.
Microplastics (MPs) are abundant in aquatic systems. The ecological risks of MPs may arise from their physical features, chemical properties, and/or their ability to concentrate and transport other contaminants, such as per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS). PFAS have been extracted from MPs found in natural waters. Still, there needs to be a mechanistic investigation of the effect of PFAS chemistry and water physicochemical properties on how PFAS partition onto secondary MPs. Here, we studied the influence of pH, natural organic matter (NOM), ionic strength, and temperature on the adsorption of PFAS on MPs generated from PET water bottles. The adsorption of PFAS to the MPs was thermodynamically spontaneous at 25 °C, based on Gibb's free energy (ΔG = -16 to -23 kJ/mol), primarily due to increased entropy after adsorption. Adsorption reached equilibrium within 7-9 h. Hence, PFAS will partition to the surface of secondary PET MPs within hours in fresh and saline waters. Natural organic matter decreased the capacity of secondary PET MPs for PFAS through electrosteric repulsion, while higher ionic strength favored PFAS adsorption by decreasing electrostatic repulsion. Increased pH increased electrostatic repulsion, which negated PFAS adsorption. The study provides fundamental information for developing models to predict interactions between secondary MPs and PFAS.
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