| Literature DB >> 29215057 |
Mengnan Lu1, Giovanni Cagnetta1, Kunlun Zhang1,2, Jun Huang3, Gang Yu1.
Abstract
Fluorinated organic chemicals have a wide variety of industrial and consumer applications. For long time perfluorooctane sulfonate and perfluorooctanoic acid have been used as precursors for manufacture of such chemicals. However, these C8 chain compounds have been demonstrated to be toxic, persistent, and bioaccumulative, thus inducing their phase-out. Currently, C6 telomer based fluorocarbon surfactants are considered better alternatives to C8 products because of their low bioaccumulability. But, their high persistency suggests that in the near future their concentrations will increase in the environment and in industrial waste. Being a solid state non-thermal technology, mechanochemical treatment is a good candidate for the destruction of emerging C6 fluorotelomers in solid waste. In the present study, 6:2 fluorotelomer sulfonate is effectively destroyed (~100%) in rapid manner (<1 h) by high energy ball milling with KOH. Stoichiometric fluoride formation confirms its entire mineralization, assuring that no toxic by-products are generated. Reaction mechanism and kinetics indicate that effective mineralization of the perfluorinated moiety is obtained thanks to a rapid CF2 "flake-off" process through radical mechanism.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29215057 PMCID: PMC5719435 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-17515-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Chemical structure of (a) perfluorooctane sulfonate, (b) perfluorooctanoic acid, and (c) 6:2 fluorotelomer sulfonate.
Figure 2Kinetics of 6:2FTS MC destruction and fluoride build-up (with its components estimated by the reaction model).
Figure 3(a) XRD pattern, (b) 19F NMR spectra, and (c) FTIR spectra of 6:2FTS MC destruction at different milling time.
Figure 4(a) F1s and (b) C1s XPS spectra of unmilled and 60 min-milled samples.
Figure 5Intermediates of 20 min-milled 6:2FTS with KOH identified by LC-MS-MS.
Figure 6Proposed reaction mechanism for the MC destruction of 6:2FTS.
Kinetic constants of the 6:2FTS MC destruction model.
| Reaction | Kinetic constant (min−1) |
|---|---|
| DHF (eq. | 0.28 |
| FOM (eqs | 2.00 |
| CF3M (eq. | 0.17 |
| PFM (eq. | 0.01 |