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Removal of PFOS, PFOA and other perfluoroalkyl acids at water reclamation plants in South East Queensland Australia
Authors:Thompson Jack  Eaglesham Geoff  Reungoat Julien  Poussade Yvan  Bartkow Michael  Lawrence Michael  Mueller Jochen F
Institution:a The University of Queensland, National Research Center for Environmental Toxicology (Entox): 39 Kessels Rd., Coopers Plains, QLD. 4108, Australia
b Queensland Health Forensic and Scientific Services (QHFSS), Special Services: 39 Kessels Rd., Coopers Plains, QLD. 4108, Australia
c The University of Queensland, Advanced Water Management Center (AWMC), QLD. 4072, Australia
d Veolia Water Australia, Level 1, 20 Wharf Street, Brisbane, QLD. 4000, Australia
e WaterSecure, Level 2, 95 North Quay, Brisbane, QLD. 4000, Australia
f SEQwater, 240 Margaret Street, Brisbane, QLD. 4000, Australia
Abstract:This paper examines the fate of perfluorinated sulfonates (PFSAs) and carboxylic acids (PFCAs) in two water reclamation plants in Australia. Both facilities take treated water directly from WWTPs and treat it further to produce high quality recycled water. The first plant utilizes adsorption and filtration methods alongside ozonation, whilst the second uses membrane processes and advanced oxidation to produce purified recycled water. At both facilities perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS), perfluorohexane sulfonate (PFHxS), perfluorohexanoic acid (PFHxA) and perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) were the most frequently detected PFCs. Concentrations of PFOS and PFOA in influent (WWTP effluent) ranged up to 3.7 and 16 ng L−1 respectively, and were reduced to 0.7 and 12 ng L−1 in the finished water of the ozonation plant. Throughout this facility, concentrations of most of the detected perfluoroalkyl compounds (PFCs) remained relatively unchanged with each successive treatment step. PFOS was an exception to this, with some removal following coagulation and dissolved air flotation/sand filtration (DAFF). At the second plant, influent concentrations of PFOS and PFOA ranged up to 39 and 29 ng L−1. All PFCs present were removed from the finished water by reverse osmosis (RO) to concentrations below detection and reporting limits (0.4-1.5 ng L−1). At both plants the observed concentrations were in the low parts per trillion range, well below provisional health based drinking water guidelines suggested for PFOS and PFOA.
Keywords:Perfluorinated compounds  Tertiary treatment  PFOS  PFOA  Reverse osmosis  Ozonation
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