Abstract
Passive samplers are key tools to sample hydrophilic micropollutants in water. Two main approaches address the influence of hydrodynamics: (1) determining site-specific sampling rate (RS) by characterizing kw, the mass transfer coefficient of the water-boundary layer (WBL), and (2) reducing WBL impact using a diffusive material to control the uptake. The first requires calibration data and the second has only been achieved using fragile diffusive material. This study assesses the transfer of hydrophilic contaminants through polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE; 30 µm thick), a new membrane material with lower sorption than commonly used polyethersulfone (PES). Combined for the first time in a Chemcatcher-like configuration, we calibrated the modified samplers for 44 micropollutants to provide RS – kw relationships for in-situ RS determination (approach 1). Micropollutants accumulated over 2000 times more on the sorbent than on PTFE. PTFE-based RS (0.027 to 0.300 L day-1) were 2.5 higher than previously reported with PES. Membrane property measurements (porosity, tortuosity) indicated that accumulation is primarily controlled by the membrane. Extrapolation indicated that using thicker PTFE membranes (≥ 100 µm) would shift uptake control entirely to the membrane in river conditions (approach 2). This finding could enable RS prediction based on contaminants properties, thus representing a significant advancement in passive sampling.
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