Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances
(PFASs) are highly mobile in
the saturated subsurface, yet aqueous film-forming foam (AFFF)-impacted
source zones appear to be long lasting PFAS reservoirs. This study
examined the release of over one hundred anionic and zwitterionic
PFASs from two AFFF-impacted surface soils under saturated conditions
with packed soil columns. Perfluoroalkyl acids (PFAAs) were released
more rapidly than their polyfluorinated precursors, while anionic
PFASs that were present in partially uncharged states were released
more slowly than PFASs that were present entirely as anions, as were
zwitterionic PFASs with terminal cationic functional groups when compared
with analogous zwitterions with only anionic terminal groups. Nonideal
transport was observed in both per- and polyfluorinated classes, as
soil column effluent concentrations of slowly released PFASs increased
by up to 107-fold with sustained artificial groundwater flow. A flow-interruption
experiment suggested the influence of rate-limited desorption on diverse
PFAS classes, including PFAAs with as few as four perfluorinated carbons.
These results suggest that during infiltration the slow, rate-limited
desorption of anionic and zwitterionic PFAA precursors may result
in these compounds comprising an increasingly large fraction of the
remaining PFASs in AFFF-impacted surface soils.
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