Air Force Civil Engineer Center, San Antonio, TX, USA.
Air Force Civil Engineer Center, San Antonio, TX, USA.
Chemosphere. 2016 May;150:678-685. doi: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2016.01.014. Epub 2016 Jan 16.
The use of aqueous film-forming foam (AFFF) to extinguish hydrocarbon-based fires is recognized as a significant source of environmental poly- and perfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs). Although the occurrence of select PFASs in soil and groundwater at former fire-training areas (FTAs) at military installations operable since 1970 has been consistently confirmed, studies reporting the occurrence of PFASs at other AFFF-impacted sites (e.g. emergency response locations, AFFF lagoons, hangar-related AFFF storage tanks and pipelines, and fire station testing and maintenance areas) are largely missing from the literature. Further, studies have mostly focused on a single site (i.e., FTAs at military installations) and, thus, lack a comparison of sites with diverse AFFF release history. Therefore, the purpose of this investigation was to evaluate select PFAS occurrence at non-FTA sites on active U.S. Air Force installations with historic AFFF use of varying magnitude. Concentrations of fifteen perfluoroalkyl acids (PFAAs) and perfluorooctane sulfonamide (PFOSA), an important PFOS precursor, were measured from several hundred samples among multiple media (i.e., surface soil, subsurface soil, sediment, surface water, and groundwater) collected from forty AFFF-impacted sites across ten installations between March and September 2014, representing one of the most comprehensive datasets on environmental PFAS occurrence to date. Differences in detection frequencies and observed concentrations due to AFFF release volume are presented along with rigorous data analyses that quantitatively demonstrate phase-dependent (i.e., solid-phase vs aqueous-phase) differences in the chemical signature as a function of carbon chain-length and in situ PFOS (and to a slightly lesser extent PFHxS) formation, presumably due to precursor biotransformation.
使用水成膜泡沫(AFFF)扑灭碳氢化合物火灾已被认为是环境多氟和全氟烷基物质(PFASs)的重要来源。尽管自 1970 年以来可运行的军事设施的前消防训练区(FTA)的土壤和地下水中一直确认存在某些 PFASs,但报告在其他受 AFFF 影响的地点(例如应急响应地点、AFFF 泻湖、机库相关 AFFF 储存罐和管道以及消防站测试和维护区)存在 PFASs 的研究在文献中基本上缺失。此外,这些研究大多集中在单个地点(即军事设施的 FTA),因此缺乏对具有不同 AFFF 释放历史的地点的比较。因此,本研究的目的是评估美国空军现役设施上具有不同 AFFF 使用历史的非 FTA 地点中特定 PFAS 的存在情况。从 2014 年 3 月至 9 月期间在十个设施的四十个受 AFFF 影响的地点采集的几百个样本中,测量了十五种全氟烷基酸(PFAAs)和全氟辛烷磺酰胺(PFOSA)的浓度,这是 PFOS 的重要前体,这些样本来自多个介质(即,表层土壤、地下土壤、沉积物、地表水和地下水)。这是迄今为止关于环境 PFAS 存在情况最全面的数据集之一。本文介绍了由于 AFFF 释放量的不同,检测频率和观察到的浓度之间的差异,以及严格的数据分析,这些分析定量地证明了在碳链长度和原位 PFOS(以及在较小程度上的 PFHxS)形成方面,与相态有关的(即固相比水相比)化学特征的差异,这可能是由于前体生物转化所致。