Abstract

Soil contaminations with per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) are of great concern due to their persistence, leading to continuous, long-term groundwater contamination. A composite sample from contaminated agricultural soil from northwestern Germany (Brilon-Scharfenberg, North Rhine-Westphalia) was investigated in depth with nontarget screening (NTS) (Kendrick mass defect and MS2 fragment mass differences with FindPFΔS). Several years ago, selected PFCAs and PFSAs were identified on this site by detection in nearby surface and drinking water. We identified 10 further PFAS classes and 7 C8-based PFAS (73 single PFAS) previously unknown in this soil including some novel PFAS. All PFAS classes except for one class comprised sulfonic acid groups and were semi-quantified with PFSA standards from which ∼97% were perfluorinated and are not expected to be degradable. New identifications made up >75% of the prior known PFAS concentration, which was estimated to >30 μg/g. Pentafluorosulfanyl (-SF5) PFSAs are the dominant class (∼40%). Finally, the soil was oxidized with the direct TOP (dTOP) assay, revealing PFAA precursors that were covered to a large extent by identified H-containing PFAS and additional TPs (perfluoroalkyl diacids) were detected after dTOP. In this soil, however, dTOP + target analysis covers <23% of the occurring PFAS, highlighting the importance of NTS to characterize PFAS contaminations more comprehensively.

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