Abstract

A pilot-scale plasma reactor installed into an 8 × 20 ft2 mobile trailer was used to rapidly and effectively degrade poly- and perfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) from liquid investigation-derived waste (IDW; development and purge water from monitoring wells) obtained from 13 different site investigations at Air Force installations. In the raw water, numerous PFAS were detected in a wide concentration range (∼10-105 ng/L; total oxidizable precursors (TOP) ∼102-105 ng/L, total fluorine by combustion ion chromatography ∼102 to 5 × 106 ng F/L). The concentration of total PFAS (12 perfluorocarboxylic acids (PFCAs) and perfluoroalkyl sulfonates (PFSAs)) in the 13 samples ranged between 2.7 and 1440 μg/L and the concentration of perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) plus perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) ranged between 365 and 73700 ng/L. Plasma-based water treatment resulted in rapid perfluoroalkyl acids (PFAAs) removal from 4 L individual IDW samples with faster rates for longer-chain PFCAs (C ≥ 8) and PFSAs (C ≥ 6) than for PFCAs and PFSAs of shorter chain length. In 9 of the 13 IDW samples, both PFOS and PFOA were removed to below United States Environmental Protection Agency's (USEPA's)health advisory concentration level (HAL)concentrations in <1 min, whereas longer treatment times (up to 50 min) were required for the remaining four IDW samples due to either extremely high solution electrical conductivity, which decreased the plasma-liquid contact area (one IDW sample) or high concentrations of PFAAs and their precursors; the latter was found to be converted to PFAAs during the treatment. Overall, 36-99% of the TOP concentration present in the IDWs was removed during the treatment. There was no effect of non-PFAS co-contaminants on the degradation efficiency. Overall, the results indicate that plasma-based water treatment is a viable technology for the treatment of PFAS-contaminated IDW.

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