Abstract

The three environmental degradation tests of hydrolysis, indirect photolysis and Zahn-Wellens microbial degradation were conducted according to the OECD and the US EPA guidelines on DEMNUM, a typical linear perfluoropolyether polymer. Low mass degradation products that formed in each test were structurally characterized and indirectly quantified by liquid chromatography mass spectrometry (LC/MS) using a reference compound and an internal standard of similar structure. The degradation of the polymer was assumed to directly correlate with the appearance of lower mass species. The hydrolysis experiment at 50 °C showed the appearance of less than a dozen low mass species with increasing pH but at the negligible total estimated amount of ∼2 ppm relative to polymer. A dozen low mass perfluoro acid entities also appeared following the indirect photolysis experiment in synthetic humic water. Their maximum total amount was at ∼150 ppm relative to polymer. The largest total amount of low mass species formed during the Zahn-Wellens biodegradation test amounted to only ∼80 ppm relative to polymer. The Zahn-Wellens conditions tended to produce larger low mass molecules than the ones formed under photolysis. The results from all three tests indicate that the polymer is stable and non-degradable in the environment.

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