Using activated carbon (AC) to adsorb per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) is highly practical for environmental remediation. However, examining the surface chemistry of carbonaceous material with regard to the removal of various PFAS has been limited, as the focus has often solely been on perfluorooctanoic acid and perfluorooctane sulfonic acid. Consequently, this study systematically explores the role of AC surface chemistry in the adsorption of PFAS with various structural properties using ACs that have been modified for different degrees of acidity, basicity, and hydrophobicity. Batch adsorption studies have demonstrated that the affinity of PFAS for the AC surface is negatively correlated with surface acidity. The removal performance at an adsorbent dose of 2 mg/L and an initial PFAS concentration of 600 ng/L is 27.4–91.4 %, 57.2–95.6 %, 92.4–99.2 %, and 89.1–99.6 % for an AC with an acidic surface, unmodified AC, defunctionalized AC, and AC with basic surface, respectively. Analyses of the adsorption isotherms, kinetics, and removal performance of the four types of ACs and 14 PFAS in water at different pH and ionic strengths reveal that hydrophobic, electron donor–acceptor, and electrostatic interactions, as well as negative charge-assisted hydrogen bond formation are necessary to describe the key adsorption characteristics observed in the experiments. The relative significance of the adsorption mechanisms depends on the PFAS structural properties, AC surface chemistry, and water composition. This extensive discourse contributes substantially to the design of an efficient carbonaceous adsorbent with specific surface moieties for removing PFAS from water.
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