RESUMO
Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) are a unique class of chemicals synthesized to aid in industrial processes, fire-fighting products, and to benefit consumer products such as clothing, cosmetics, textiles, carpets, and coatings. The widespread use of PFAS and their strong carbon-fluorine bonds has led to their ubiquitous presence throughout the world. Airborne transport of PFAS throughout the atmosphere has also contributed to environmental pollution. Due to the potential environmental and human exposure concerns of some PFAS, research has extensively focused on water, soil, and organismal detection, but the presence of PFAS in the air has become an area of growing concern. Methods to measure polar PFAS in various matrices have been established, while the investigation of polar and nonpolar PFAS in air is still in its early development. This literature review aims to present the last two decades of research characterizing PFAS in outdoor and indoor air, focusing on active and passive air sampling and analytical methods. The PFAS classes targeted and detected in air samples include fluorotelomer alcohols (FTOHs), perfluoroalkane sulfonamides (FASAs), perfluoroalkane sulfonamido ethanols (FASEs), perfluorinated carboxylic acids (PFCAs), and perfluorinated sulfonic acids (PFSAs). Although the manufacturing of perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) and perfluorooctane sulfonic acid (PFOS) has been largely phased out, these two PFAS are still often detected in air samples. Additionally, recent estimates indicate that there are thousands of PFAS that are likely present in the air that are not currently monitored in air methods. Advances in air sampling methods are needed to fully characterize the atmospheric transport of PFAS.
Assuntos
Poluentes Atmosféricos , Poluição do Ar em Ambientes Fechados , Monitoramento Ambiental , Fluorocarbonos , Fluorocarbonos/análise , Monitoramento Ambiental/métodos , Poluentes Atmosféricos/análise , Poluição do Ar em Ambientes Fechados/análise , HumanosRESUMO
In continuing to examine the interaction of actinide-ligand bonds with soft donor ligands, a comparative investigation with phosphorus and arsenic was conducted. A reaction of (C5Me5)2AnMe2, An = Th, U, with 2 equiv of H2AsMes, Mes = 2,4,6-Me3C6H2, forms the primary bis(arsenido) complexes, (C5Me5)2An[As(H)Mes]2. Both exhibit thermal instability at room temperature, leading to the elimination of H2, and the formation of the diarsenido species, (C5Me5)2An(η2-As2Mes2). The analogous diphosphido complexes, (C5Me5)2An(η2-P2Mes2), could not be synthesized via the same route, even upon heating the bis(phosphido) species to 100 °C in toluene. However, they were accessible via the reaction of dimesityldiphosphane, MesP(H)P(H)Mes, with (C5Me5)2AnMe2 at 70 °C in toluene. When (C5Me5)2AnMe2 is reacted with 1 equiv of H2AsMes, the bridging µ2-arsinidiide complexes [(C5Me5)2An]2(µ2-AsMes)2 are formed. Upon reaction of (C5Me5)2UMe2 with 1 equiv of H2PMes, the phosphinidiide [(C5Me5)2U(µ2-PMes)]2 is isolated. However, the analogous thorium reaction leads to a phosphido and C-H bond activation of the methyl on the mesityl group, forming {(C5Me5)2Th[P(H)(2,4-Me2C6H2-6-CH2)]}2. The reactivity of [(C5Me5)2An(µ2-EMes)]2 was investigated with OPPh3 in an effort to produce terminal phosphinidene or arsinidene complexes. For E = As, An = U, a U(III) cation-anion pair [(C5Me5)2U(η2-As2Mes2)][(C5Me5)2U(OPPh3)2] is isolated. The reaction of [(C5Me5)2Th(µ2-AsMes)]2 with OPPh3 does not result in a terminal arsinidene but, instead, eliminates PPh3 to yield a bridging arsinidiide/oxo complex, [(C5Me5)2Th]2(µ2-AsMes)(µ2-O). Finally, the combination of [(C5Me5)2U(µ2-PMes)]2 and OPPh3 yields a terminal phosphinidene, (C5Me5)2U(âPMes)(OPPh3), featuring a short U-P bond distance of 2.502(2) Å. Electrochemical measurements on the uranium pnictinidiide complexes demonstrate only a 0.04 V difference with phosphorus as a slightly better donor. Magnetic measurements on the uranium complexes show more excited-state mixing and therefore higher magnetic moments with the arsenic-containing compounds but no deviation from uncoupled U(IV) behavior. Finally, a quantum theory of atoms in molecules analysis shows highly polarized actinide-pnictogen bonds with similar bonding characteristics, supporting the electrochemical and magnetic measurements of similar bonding between actinide-phosphorus and actinide-arsenic bonds.