| Literature DB >> 22125449 |
Theodore Chao Lim1, Bin Wang, Jun Huang, Shubo Deng, Gang Yu.
Abstract
Perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) is a persistent, bioaccumulative, and toxic chemical that has the potential for long-range transport in the environment. Its use in a wide variety of consumer products and industrial processes makes a detailed characterization of its emissions sources very challenging. These varied emissions sources all contribute to PFOS' existence within nearly all environmental media. Currently, China is the only country documented to still be producing PFOS, though there is no China PFOS emission inventory available. This study reviews the inventory methodologies for PFOS in other countries to suggest a China-specific methodology framework for a PFOS emission inventory. The suggested framework combines unknowns for PFOS-containing product penetration into the Chinese market with product lifecycle assumptions, centralizing these diverse sources into municipal sewage treatment plants. Releases from industrial sources can be quantified separately using another set of emission factors. Industrial sources likely to be relevant to the Chinese environment are identified.Entities:
Keywords: Perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS); Persistent Organic Pollutants; emissions, industrial sources; inventory methodology, China; perfluorinated compounds; wastewater treatment plants
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22125449 PMCID: PMC3217613 DOI: 10.1100/2011/868156
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ScientificWorldJournal ISSN: 1537-744X
Figure 1Comparison of geometric means of measured surface water PFOS concentrations in several Chinese cities versus those of Japan, Korea, USA, and Germany. Error bars represent standard deviation.
Global usage amounts of PFOS-related substances in diverse settings and per use area.
| Main category | Setting | Applications | Global usage amount (2000)a |
|---|---|---|---|
| Surface treatments | Industrial | Textile mills, leather tanneries, finishers, fiber producers, carpet manufacturers | 2,160 metric tons |
| General public or professional applicators after market treatment | Apparel and leather, upholstery, carpet, automobile interiors | ||
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| Paper protection | Paper mills | Food contact applications (plates, food containers, bags, and wraps), nonfood contact applications (folding cartons, containers, carbonless forms, masking papers) | 1,490 metric tons |
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| Performance chemicals | Industrial, commercial, and consumer applications | Fire-fighting foams | 151 metric tons |
| Mining and oil well surfactants, acid mist suppressants for metal plating, electronic etching baths, photolithography, electronic chemicals, hydraulic fluid additives, alkaline cleaners, floor polishes, photographic film, denture cleaners, shampoos, chemical intermediates, coating additives, carpet spot cleaners, insecticide in bait stations | 680 metric tons | ||
aGlobal usage amounts from 3M company estimate [5].
Three major source pathways of PFOS-related compounds: direct, degradation and residual PFOS.
| Category | Subcategory | Applications | Environmental source |
|---|---|---|---|
| PFOS salts | K+, Li+, DEA, NH4+ | Surfactant in fire-fighting foam, surfactant for alkaline cleaners, emulsifier in floor polish mist, suppressant for metal plating baths, surfactant for etching acids for circuit boards, and pesticide active ingredient for ant bait traps. | Direct |
| Amines | Mist suppressant for metal plating baths | ||
| Ammonium Salts | Mist suppressant for metal plating baths | ||
| Amphoterics | Water/solvent repellence for leather/paper. | ||
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| |||
| PFOS substances (FOSA) | Carboxylates | Antistatic agent in photographic paper. | Degradation |
| Amides | Pesticide active ingredient. | ||
| Oxazolidinones | Waterproofing casts | ||
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| PFOS polymers (FOSE) and higher molecular weight substances | Alcohols, silanes, alkoxylates, fatty acid esters, adipates, urethanes, polyesters, acrylates | Soil/water repellence for carpet, fabric/upholstery, apparel, leather, metal/glass | Degradation and residual |
| Copolymers, phosphate esters | Soil/water repellence for carpet, fabric/upholstery, apparel, leather, metal/glass. Oil/water repellence for plates, food containers, bags, wraps, folding cartons, containers, carbonless forms, masking papers | ||
Figure 2Flow chart diagram of China dioxin emission inventory methodology [82].
Figure 3Conceptualization of PFOS “Lifecycle” inventory methodology. Each industry necessitates determination of PFOS amount used and percentages emitted during each stage of lifecycle.
Figure 4Conceptualization of the “Direct-Indirect” methodology. Percentages are based on pre-3M phaseout and, thus, not representative of Chinese situation.
Figure 5Conceptualization of proposed emission inventory methodology.
Important use areas for preliminary PFOS emissions inventory for China.
| Setting | Activity | Primary release media |
|---|---|---|
| Industrial | POSF production | Industrial wastewater |
| Metal plating | Industrial wastewater | |
| AFFF formulation | Industrial wastewater | |
| AFFF use | Industrial wastewater | |
| Semiconductor manufacture | Industrial wastewater | |
| Textile treatment reformulation | Industrial wastewater | |
| Textile fabric treatment | Industrial wastewater | |
| Outdoor | AFFF use | Water, soil |
| Domestic | Fabric/textile use, other products | Domestic wastewater |
Figure 6Estimates of China POSF production by three different sources. Square: Liu et al. [85]; Triangle: China MEP 2008 [9]; Circle: Yu 2010 [8].
Prioritized industrial data requirements for preliminary and advanced emissions inventory.
| Industry | Data needed | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Preliminary | Advanced | ||
| Priority | POSF production | Production amounts | Factory locations |
| China facility waste to air and water values | |||
| Textiles | Amount of treatment formulation imported to China | Industy spatial distribution | |
| Meters of treated fabric | Specific treatment names and amounts | ||
| Dilution factor | Historical situation of treated fabrics export, domestic consumption | ||
| Process % release to wastewater | |||
| Process % release to air | |||
| Metal plating | Tons of PFOS-based mist suppressant consumed | Industry spatial distribution | |
| Process % release to wastewater | National industry's total square meters of plating | ||
| Process % release to air | Estimate amount mist suppressant used be square meter plating | ||
| Number of platers | Percentage of market using PFOS-based mist suppressant | ||
| Semi Conductors | Production amounts, industry capacity | Industry spatial distribution | |
| Estimate of tons of PFOS consumption | Specific chemical names and PFOS-type substance | ||
| Process % release to wastewater | |||
| Process % release to air | |||
| AFFF | National PFOS consumption amount | AFFF consumption amounts per province | |
| National usage/storage information | Clean-up scenarios | ||
| Expiration scenario | Main institutions: petroleum, airports, military, and so forth. | ||
| Paper treatment | Registration status/current processes | Square meters of treated paper | |
| Total amount PFOS used | |||
| Process release to wastewater | |||
| Process release to air | |||
| Later investigation | Pesticide | Emission scenario study | |
| Cleaning products | Registration status | ||
| Photography | Registration status/current processes | ||
| Aviation | Registration status/current processes | ||