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Nano-enabled sensing of per-/poly-fluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) from aqueous systems - A review.
Garg, Shafali; Kumar, Pankaj; Greene, George W; Mishra, Vandana; Avisar, Dror; Sharma, Radhey Shyam; Dumée, Ludovic F.
Affiliation
  • Garg S; University of Delhi, Bioresources and Environmental Biotechnology Laboratory, Department of Environmental Studies, India.
  • Kumar P; University of Delhi, Bioresources and Environmental Biotechnology Laboratory, Department of Environmental Studies, India.
  • Greene GW; Deakin University, Institute for Frontier Materials, Burwood, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
  • Mishra V; University of Delhi, Bioresources and Environmental Biotechnology Laboratory, Department of Environmental Studies, India; University of Delhi, Delhi School of Climate Change and Sustainability, Institute of Eminence, Delhi, 110007, India.
  • Avisar D; Tel Aviv University, School for Environmental and Earth Sciences, Water Research Center, Tel Aviv, Israel.
  • Sharma RS; University of Delhi, Bioresources and Environmental Biotechnology Laboratory, Department of Environmental Studies, India; University of Delhi, Delhi School of Climate Change and Sustainability, Institute of Eminence, Delhi, 110007, India. Electronic address: radheyss26@gmail.com.
  • Dumée LF; Khalifa University, Department of Chemical Engineering, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates; Khalifa University, Center for Membrane and Advanced Water Technology, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates; Khalifa University, Research and Innovation Center on CO(2) and Hydrogen, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates.
J Environ Manage ; 308: 114655, 2022 Apr 15.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35131704
Per-/poly-fluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) are an emerging class of environmental contaminants used as an additive across various commodity and fire-retardant products, for their unique thermo-chemical stability, and to alter their surface properties towards selective liquid repellence. These properties also make PFAS highly persistent and mobile across various environmental compartments, leading to bioaccumulation, and causing acute ecotoxicity at all trophic levels particularly to human populations, thus increasing the need for monitoring at their repositories or usage sites. In this review, current nano-enabled methods towards PFAS sensing and its monitoring in wastewater are critically discussed and benchmarked against conventional detection methods. The discussion correlates the materials' properties to the sensitivity, responsiveness, and reproducibility of the sensing performance for nano-enabled sensors in currently explored electrochemical, spectrophotometric, colorimetric, optical, fluorometric, and biochemical with limits of detection of 1.02 × 10-6 µg/L, 2.8 µg/L, 1 µg/L, 0.13 µg/L, 6.0 × 10-5 µg/L, and 4.141 × 10-7 µg/L respectively. The cost-effectiveness of sensing platforms plays an important role in the on-site analysis success and upscalability of nano-enabled sensors. Environmental monitoring of PFAS is a step closer to PFAS remediation. Electrochemical and biosensing methods have proven to be the most reliable tools for future PFAS sensing endeavors with very promising detection limits in an aqueous matrix, short detection times, and ease of fabrication.
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Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Water Pollutants, Chemical / Alkanesulfonic Acids / Fluorocarbons Limits: Humans Language: En Journal: J Environ Manage Year: 2022 Document type: Article Affiliation country: Country of publication:

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Water Pollutants, Chemical / Alkanesulfonic Acids / Fluorocarbons Limits: Humans Language: En Journal: J Environ Manage Year: 2022 Document type: Article Affiliation country: Country of publication: