The application of contaminated paper sludge on arable land in southwest Germany caused the occurrence of a broad range of poly-and perfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs) on soil. Recently, the dead-end transformation products (TPs) perfluorooctanoic acid and perfluorooctanesulfonic acid were detected in groundwater and drinking water. The precursors and other transformation products mostly remained unknown. Therefore, HRMS screening by Kendrick mass analysis and assignment of homologous series in combination with suspect screening were applied to identify original PFASs and their TPs in four different soil samples from sites where contaminated paper sludge was applied. In total, twelve compound classes comprising more than 61 PFASs could be fully or tentatively identified. The data reveal that contamination mainly originates from polyfluorinated dialkylated phosphate esters (from 4:2/6:2 to 12:2/14:2), N-ethyl perfluorooctane sulfonamide ethanol-based phosphate diesters (only C 8 / C 8) and transformation products of these precursors. Contamination patterns can be attributed to PFASs used for paper impregnation and can vary slightly from site to site. Keywords Poly-and perfluoroalkyl substances. High-resolution mass spectrometry. Screening. Kendrick mass. Soil. Contamination Abbreviations AIF All-ion fragmentation Da Dalton diPAP Polyfluorinated dialkylated phosphate ester diSAmPAP N-Ethyl perfluorooctane sulfonamide ethanolbased phosphate diester EIC Extracted ion chromatogram ESI Electrospray ionization EtFASA N-Ethyl perfluoroalkanesulfonamide EtFASAA N-Ethylperfluoro-1-alkanesulfonamidoacetic acid EtFOSAA N-Ethylperfluoro-1-octanesulfonamidoacetic acid FASA Perfluoroalkanesulfonamide FOSA Perfluorooctanesulfonamide FTOH Fluorotelomer alcohol FTSA Fluorotelomer sulfonic acid FTUCA Fluorotelomer unsaturated carboxylic acid GenX A m m o n i u m 2 , 3 , 3 , 3-t e t r a f l u o r o-2-(heptafluoropropoxy) propanoate HRMS High-resolution mass spectrometry HS Homologous series KM Kendrick mass KMD Kendrick mass defect LC Liquid chromatography LTZ Landwirtschaftliches Technologiezentrum Augustenberg MeFASA N-Methyl perfluoroalkanesulfonamide MeOH Methanol MFE Molecular feature extraction NH 4 Ac Ammonium acetate Published in the topical collection Persistent and Mobile Organic Compounds-An Environmental Challenge with guest editors Torsten C.
The limited availability of analytical reference standards makes non-target screening approaches based on high-resolution mass spectrometry increasingly important for the efficient identification of unknown PFAS (per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances) and their TPs. We developed and optimized a vendor-independent open-source Python-based algorithm (FindPFΔS = FindPolyFluoroDeltas) to search for distinct fragment mass differences in MS/MS raw data (.ms2-files). Optimization with PFAS standards, two pre-characterized paper and soil samples (iterative data-dependent acquisition), revealed Δ(CF2) n , ΔHF, ΔC n H3F2n–3, ΔC n H2F2n–4, ΔC n HF2n–5, ΔC n F2n SO3, ΔCF3, and ΔCF2O as relevant and selective fragment differences depending on applied collision energies. In a PFAS standard mix, 94% (36 of 38 compounds from 10 compound classes) could be found by FindPFΔS. The use of fragment differences was applicable to a wide range of PFAS classes and appears as a promising new approach for PFAS identification. The influence of mass tolerance and intensity threshold on the identification efficiency and on the detection of false positives was systematically evaluated with the use of selected HR-MS2-spectra (20,998) from MassBank. To this end, with the use of FindPFΔS, we could identify different unknown PFAS homologues in the paper extracts. FindPFΔS is freely available as both Python source code on GitHub () and as an executable windows application () with a graphical user interface on Zenodo.
High per- and polyfluorinated alkyl substance (PFAS) concentrations have been detected in agricultural soils in Southwest Germany. Discharges of PFAS-contaminated paper sludge and compost are suspected to be the cause of the contamination. Perfluorinated carboxylic acids (PFCAs) have been detected also in groundwater, drinking water, and plants in this area. Recently, previously unknown compounds have been identified by high-resolution mass spectrometry (HRMS). Major contaminants were polyfluorinated dialkylated phosphate esters (diPAPs) and N-ethyl perfluorooctane sulfonamide ethanol–based phosphate diester (diSAmPAP). In this study, HRMS screening for PFAS was applied to 14 soil samples from the contaminated area and 14 impregnated paper samples which were from a similar period than the contamination. The paper samples were characterized by diPAPs (from 4:2/6:2 to 12:2/12:2), fluorotelomer mercapto alkyl phosphates (FTMAPs; 6:2/6:2 to 10:2/10:2), and diSAmPAP. In soil samples, diPAPs and their transformation products (TPs) were the major contaminants, but also FTMAPs, diSAmPAP, and their TPs occurred. The distribution patterns of the carbon chain lengths of the precursor PFAS in soil samples were shown to resemble those in paper samples. This supports the hypothesis that paper sludge is a major source of contamination. The presence of major degradation products like PFCAs, FTSAs, or PFOS and their distribution of carbon chain lengths indicate the activity of biotic or abiotic degradation processes and selective leaching processes from the upper soil horizons. Graphical abstract
To unravel the complexity of per-and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) in products and environmental samples, sum parameters that provide relevant information on chemical characteristics are necessary since not all PFAS can be captured by target analysis in case of missing reference standards or if they are not extractable or amenable to the analytical method. Therefore, we evaluated photocatalysis (UV/TiO 2 ) as a further total oxidizable precursor approach (Photo-TOP) to characterize perfluoroalkyl acid precursors via their conversion to perfluoroalkyl carboxylic acids (PFCAs). Photocatalysis has the advantage that no salts are needed, allowing direct injection with liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry without time-consuming and potentially discriminating sample cleanup. OH radicals were monitored with OH probes to determine the reactivity. For eight different precursors (diPAPs, FTSAs, FTCAs, N-EtFOSAA, PFOSA), mass balance was achieved within 4 h of oxidation, and also, in the presence of matrix, complete conversion was possible. The PhotoTOP was able to predict the precursor chain length of known and here newly identified precursors qualitatively when applied to two PFAS-coated paper samples and technical PFAS mixtures. The length of the perfluorinated carbon chain (n) was mostly conserved in the form of PFCAs (n-1) with only minor fractions of shorter-chain PFCAs. Finally, an unknown fabric sample and a polymer mixture (no PFAS detectable in extracts) were oxidized, and the generated PFCAs indicated the occurrence of side-chain fluorinated polymers.
Non-target screening (NTS) based on high-resolution mass spectrometry (HRMS) is necessary to comprehensively characterize per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) in environmental, biological, and technical samples due to the very limited availability of authentic PFAS reference standards. Since in trace analysis, MS/MS information is not always achievable and only selected PFAS are present in homologous series, further techniques to prioritize measured HRMS data (features) according to their likelihood of being PFAS are highly desired due to the importance of efficient data reduction during NTS. Kaufmann et al. (J AOAC Int, 2022) presented a very promising approach to separate selected PFAS from sample matrix features by plotting the mass defect (MD) normalized to the number of carbons (MD/C) vs. mass normalized to the number of C (m/C). We systematically evaluated the advantages and limitations of this approach by using ~ 490,000 chemical formulas of organic chemicals (~ 210,000 PFAS, ~ 160,000 organic contaminants, and 125,000 natural organic matter compounds) and calculating how efficiently, and especially which, PFAS can be prioritized. While PFAS with high fluorine content (approximately: F/C > 0.8, H/F < 0.8, mass percent of fluorine > 55%) can be separated well, partially fluorinated PFAS with a high hydrogen content are more difficult to prioritize, which we discuss for selected PFAS. In the MD/C-m/C approach, even compounds with highly positive MDs above 0.5 Da and hence incorrectly assigned to negative MDs can still be separated from true negative mass defect features by the normalized mass (m/C). Furthermore, based on the position in the MD/C-m/C plot, we propose the estimation of the fluorine fraction in molecules for selected PFAS classes. The promising MD/C-m/C approach can be widely used in PFAS research and routine analysis. The concept is also applicable to other compound classes like iodinated compounds. Graphical Abstract
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