1. Low Temperature Thermal Treatment of Gas-Phase Fluorotelomer Alcohols by Calcium Oxide
- Author
-
Jeffrey V. Ryan, Chun Wai Lee, M. Ariel Geer Wallace, Erin P. Shields, Theran P. Riedel, and William P. Linak
- Subjects
Environmental Engineering ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,0208 environmental biotechnology ,Fraction (chemistry) ,02 engineering and technology ,Thermal treatment ,010501 environmental sciences ,01 natural sciences ,Article ,Gas phase ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Environmental Chemistry ,Humans ,Fluorotelomer ,Calcium oxide ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Fluorocarbons ,Chemistry ,Treatment process ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Temperature ,Treatment options ,Oxides ,General Medicine ,General Chemistry ,Calcium Compounds ,Pollution ,Mass spectrometric ,020801 environmental engineering ,Environmental chemistry ,Alcohols ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
Given the extent to which per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) are used in commercial and industrial applications, the need to evaluate treatment options that reduce environmental emissions and human and ecological exposures of PFAS is becoming more necessary. One specific chemical class of PFAS, fluorotelomer alcohols (FTOHs), have vapor pressures such that a significant fraction is expected to be present in the gas-phase even at ambient temperatures. FTOHs are used in a variety of PFAS applications, including synthesis and material coatings. Using two complementary mass spectrometric methods, the use of calcium oxide (CaO) was examined as a low temperature and potentially low-cost thermal treatment media for removal and destruction of four gas-phase FTOHs of varying molecular weights. This was accomplished by assessing the removal/destruction efficiency of the FTOHs and the formation of fluorinated byproducts as a function of treatment temperature (200–800 °C) in the presence of CaO compared to thermal-only destruction. During the treatment process, there is evidence that other PFAS compounds are produced at low temperatures (200–600 °C) as the primary FTOH partially degrades. At temperatures above 600 °C, thermal treatment with CaO prevented the formation or removed nearly all these secondary products.
- Published
- 2021