Per- and polyfluoroalkyl
substances (PFASs) are important environmental
contaminants, yet relatively few analytical reference standards exist
for this class. Nontarget analyses performed by means of high-resolution
mass spectrometry (HRMS) are increasingly common for the discovery
and identification of PFASs in environmental and biological samples.
The certainty of PFAS identifications made via HRMS must be communicated
through a reliable and harmonized approach. Here, we present a confidence
scale along with identification criteria specific to suspect or nontarget
analysis of PFASs by means of nontarget HRMS. Confidence levels range
from level 1a—“Confirmed by Reference Standard,”
and level 1b—“Indistinguishable from Reference Standard,”
to level 5—“Exact Masses of Interest,” which
are identified by suspect screening or data filtering, two common
forms of feature prioritization. This confidence scale is consistent
with general criteria for communicating confidence in the identification
of small organic molecules by HRMS (e.g., through a match to analytical
reference standards, library MS/MS, and/or retention times) but incorporates
the specific conventions and tools used in PFAS classification and
analysis (e.g., detection of homologous series and specific ranges
of mass defects). Our scale clarifies the level of certainty in PFAS
identification and, in doing so, facilitates more efficient identification.
Information is needed on the concentration
of per- and polyfluoroalkyl
substances (PFAS) in foams on surface waters impacted by aqueous film-forming
foam (AFFF). Nine pairs of foam and underlying bulk water were collected
from a single freshwater lake impacted by PFAS and analyzed for PFAS
by liquid chromatography quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometry
(LC-QToF) and for dissolved organic carbon (DOC). The DOC of two foam:bulk
water pairs was characterized by 1H NMR. Foams were comprised
of 16 PFAS with concentrations as high as 97 000 ng/L (PFOS)
along with longer-chain, more hydrophobic PFAS. Only five PFAS (PFOS
and shorter chain lengths) were quantified in underlying bulk waters.
Enrichment factors (foam:bulk water) ranged from 10 (PFHxA) up to
2830 (PFOS). Foams impacted by AFFF gave the greatest concentrations
and number of PFAS classes with PFOS concentrations exceeding the
EPA health advisory level (70 ng/L). PFAS concentrations were significantly
below published critical micelle concentrations and constituted <0.1%
of overall DOC concentrations in foam, indicating that PFAS are a
minor fraction of DOC and that DOC likely plays a central role in
foam formation. Estimates indicate that foam ingestion is a potentially
important route of exposure for children and adults when they are
in surface waters where foam is present.
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