Abstract

Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) represent a large group of synthetic organic compounds which exhibit unique properties and have been extensively used for consumer and industrial products, resulting in a widespread presence in the environment. Regulation requiring PFAS monitoring has been implemented worldwide due to their potential health and eco-toxicological effects. Targeted methods are commonly used to monitor between twenty to forty PFAS compounds, representing only a small fraction of the number of compounds that may be present. Consequently, there is an increasing interest in complementary non-targeted methods to screen and identify unknown PFAS compounds with the aim to improve knowledge and to generate more accurate models regarding their environmental mobility and persistence. This work details the development of a method that simultaneously provided targeted and non-targeted PFAS analysis. Ultra-high performance liquid chromatography (UHPLC) was coupled to ion mobility-quadrupole time of flight-mass spectrometry (IMS-QTOF-MS) and used to quantify known and screen unknown PFAS in environmental samples collected within the greater Sydney basin (Australia). The method was validated for the quantification of 14 sulfonate-based PFAS, and a non-targeted data analysis workflow was developed using a combination of mass defect analysis with common fragment and neutral loss filtering to identify fluorine-containing species. The optimised method was applied to the environmental samples and enabled the determination of 3–7 compounds from the targeted list and the detection of a further 56–107 untargeted PFAS. This simultaneous analysis reduces the complexity of multiple analyses, and allows for greater interrogation of the full PFAS load in environmental samples.

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