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1.
Sci Total Environ ; 754: 142107, 2021 Feb 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32920395

ABSTRACT

Treatment technologies such as ion exchange (IX) process exhibit promising potentials for the removal of toxic per- and poly-fluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) from natural waters. In recent years, industries have started manufacturing PFAS-specific resins which are typically operated in a single use-and-dispose mode until exhaustion. However, this increases the resin demand and the consequent operational cost and environmental burden of the IX process. In this study, the performance of a PFAS-specific resin (A592) was compared with that of a regenerative organic scavenger resin (A860) which is traditionally employed for dissolved organic matter (DOM) and micorpollutant removal. Comparative studies were performed to examine the removal of multiple long- and short-chain carboxylic, sulfonic, precursor and emerging PFAS (including GenX) from synthetic and natural waters. The A592 resin exhibited faster uptake kinetics for PFAS while simultaneously removing 10-15% of DOM. The A860 resin removed ~60-70% of DOM; however, it required approximately 3-fold higher contact times for achieving the same degree of PFAS removal when compared to the PFAS-specific resin. The resin breakthrough (Ctreated (PFAS) > 70 ng/L) was observed around 125,000 ± 5000 bed volumes (BVs) for the PFAS-specific resin (via multiple loading tests), while it ranged between 15,000-27,000 BVs for the organic scavenger. Yet, a mass balance on PFAS and DOM removal indicated ~90-98% site saturation (in milli-equivalents (meqs)) on both IX resins before exhaustion. More importantly, the regenerated organic scavenger resin (A860) exhibited PFAS and DOM removal capabilities for longer operational BVs when compared to A592 operated in a single-use-mode in natural waters.

2.
Water Res ; 183: 116098, 2020 Sep 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32663697

ABSTRACT

We present the first study investigating optimized regeneration strategies for anionic ion exchange (IX) resins during the removal of persistent per- and poly-fluoroalkyl substances (PFAS, including GenX) from surface and treated wastewater effluents. IX regeneration studies are of critical importance from environmental perspectives. Specifically, the knowledge is essential for water utilities who presently operate IX (for PFAS removal) in a single use-and-dispose mode. In this study, legacy PFAS such as PFOA/PFOS were tested along with other harmful short-chained PFAS (PFBA/PFBS) and other toxic perfluorinated substitutes (GenX). Studies were performed on synthetic water (spiked with Suwannee River Natural Organic Matter (SRNOM), Fulvic Acid (SRFA) and Humic Acid (SRHA)), surface water, and wastewater effluents, and the regeneration was performed in batch stirred reactors. The resin service life with and without regeneration was investigated in the presence of background organic matter. In ultra-pure waters, all PFAS (C0 ∼10 µg/L, concentrations similar to that of natural waters) were effectively removed for >100,000 Bed Volume (BV) of operation. This was reduced to ∼23,500 BV in the presence of SRNOM (C0 = 5 mg C/L), 20,500 BV in SRFA and 8500 BV in SRHA, after which the saturated resins required regeneration. More importantly, all resin breakthrough (PFAS> 70 ng/L) corresponded to > 90% resin site saturation (in meqs), an essential information for optimizing IX loading. The competitive dissolved organic matter (DOM) fractions were estimated to be approximately 5-9% of the initial DOC, as estimated by the IAST-EBC model. Finally, it was identified that IX regeneration efficiency improved with increasing brine contact time but effectiveness plateaued for brine concentrations above 10% (W/V). Nonetheless, a regeneration with 10% NaCl solution with a contact time of 2 h was found to be optimal for IX operations in synthetic and natural waters. Therefore, this study provides key knowledge essential for the scientific community and the water industry on optimizing IX operational parameters for DOM and PFAS removal and would be highly valuable for systems which presently operate IX in a use-and-dispose mode.


Subject(s)
Fluorocarbons , Water Pollutants, Chemical/analysis , Water Purification , Adsorption , Ion Exchange , Wastewater
3.
J Hazard Mater ; 384: 121261, 2020 02 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31574386

ABSTRACT

Carcinogenic GenX chemicals, heptafluoropropylene-oxide-dimer-acid (HFPO-DA), have been recently detected in surface, ground and recycled water sources worldwide. However, GenX removals under the influence of variable characteristics of the organic and inorganic compounds present in the natural water sources, have often been overlooked in scientific literature. This is critically important given that the ionic composition and characteristics of organic matter in natural waters are spatially and seasonally variable. A strongly basic anion exchange (IX) resin was used to remove GenX and two other perfluorinated ether acids (PFEAS) from natural surface and recycled water sources. Factors influencing the uptake behavior included the PFEAS concentrations, resin dosage, and background anion characteristics. The equivalent background compound was employed to evaluate the competitive uptake between natural organic matter (NOM), inorganic ions and PFEAS in natural water matrices. Experimental data were compared with different mathematical and physical models and it was depicted that approximately 4-6% of the initial NOM competed with PFEAS for active exchange sites. Further, IX was able to achieve complete PFEAS removal (Cfinal<10 ng/L) with simultaneous removal of>60% NOM and >80% inorganic ions. Results of this study indicate that IX exhibits great potential for PFEAS removal from natural drinking water sources.


Subject(s)
Anion Exchange Resins/chemistry , Carcinogens/isolation & purification , Fluorocarbons/isolation & purification , Propionates/isolation & purification , Solid Phase Extraction/methods , Water Pollutants, Chemical/isolation & purification , Water Purification/methods , Drinking Water/chemistry , Wastewater/chemistry
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