Heidi
Knutsen
*a,
Trond
Mæhlum
b,
Ketil
Haarstad
b,
Gøril Aasen
Slinde
a and
Hans Peter H.
Arp
*ac
aNorwegian Geotechnical Institute (NGI), P.O. Box 3930 Ullevål Stadion, N-0806 Oslo, Norway. E-mail: hkn@ngi.no; hpa@ngi.no; Tel: +47 478 51 733, +47 950 02 667
bNorwegian Institute of Bioeconomy Research (NIBIO), P.O. Box 115, N-1431 Ås, Norway
cNorwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), NO-7491 Trondheim, Norway
First published on 9th August 2019
Restrictions on the use of long-chain per- and polyfluoralkyl substances (PFASs) has led to substitutions with short-chain PFASs. This study investigated the presence of four short-chain PFASs and twenty-four long-chain PFASs in leachate and sediment from ten Norwegian landfills, including one site in Svalbard, to assess whether short-chain PFASs are more dominant in leachate. PFASs were detected in all sites. Short-chain PFASs were major contributors to the total PFAS leachate concentrations in six of ten landfills, though not in Svalbard. In sediment, long-chain PFASs such as perfluorooctanesulfonate (PFOS) and PFOS-precursors were dominant. Short-chain PFAS leachate concentrations ranged from 68 to 6800 ng L−1 (mean: 980 ± 1800; median: 360 ng L−1), whereas long-chain concentrations ranged from 140 to 2900 ng L−1 (mean: 530 ± 730; median: 290 ng L−1). Sediment concentrations, which contained mainly long-chain PFASs, ranged from 8.5 to 120 μg kg−1 (mean: 47 ± 36; median: 41 μg kg−1). National release from Norwegian landfills to the environment was estimated to be 17 ± 29 kg per year (median: 6.3 kg per year), which is in the same range as national emissions from the US, China and Germany after normalizing the data to a per capita emission factor (3.2 ± 5.5 mg per person per year). Results from this study are compared with previous and current studies in other countries, indicating a general trend that short-chain PFASs are dominating over long-chain PFASs in landfill leachate emissions.
Regulations of PFAS in recent years3,7,8 have led to restrictions of perfluorooctanesulfonate (PFOS), perfluorooctanoate (PFOA) and other so-called “long-chain” PFASs.9,10 This has resulted in these being replaced on the market with alternatives including so-called “short-chain” PFASs, such as perfluorobutanesulfonate (PFBS), which are considered to be less bioaccumulative.9–11 Short-chain PFASs are defined by Buck et al. (2011)10 and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) as perfluoroalkyl carboxylic acids (PFCAs) with a chain length of <C7, and <C6 for perfluoroalkane sulfonates (PFSAs).9,10 Though short-chain PFASs are less bioaccumulative, they are of concern because of their environmental persistence and aquatic mobility,1 and because currently little is known about their (eco)toxicity.12 As such, it is important to investigate to what extent these short-chain PFASs are being emitted to and occurring in the environment.
Landfill leachate from municipal solid waste are potential emission hotspots for PFASs,13–16 though concentrations vary widely.13–15,17,18 There are few available data on PFAS occurrence in Norwegian landfill leachates;19,20 though the first available data, comprising data from ten landfills from 2003–2007 based on non-target screening, indicated short-chain PFASs were infrequently detected (or analysed for (ref. 21)), and long-chain PFASs clearly dominated.20 Studies from North American landfills from 2006 to 2009 reported that specific short-chain PFASs were amongst the most dominant in landfills,13,15 and this has also been reported in more recent studies from elsewhere such as China,22 Germany,17 Sweden,23 and Spain.24 It is therefore anticipated based on this shift of usage and data from other countries, that short-chain PFASs are emitted to a greater extent than long-chain PFASs from Norwegian landfill leachate.
The aims of this study are three-fold. The first is to characterize the aqueous (leachate) concentration and composition of PFASs being emitted from a diverse array of Norwegian landfills, alongside PFAS composition in leachate sediment. The second aim is, based on this data, to test the hypothesis that short-chain PFASs dominate landfill emissions over long-chain PFASs. The third aim is to compare these results with other regions, through the derived national per capita emission factors of short and long-chain PFASs. For this study, leachate and sediment was collected from ten diverse Norwegian landfills, including one in Svalbard, and analysed for PFASs. The collected data is further discussed in terms of the distribution of PFASs between collected sediment and water leachate, the influence of leachate characteristics, including pH, electrical conductivity (EC), leachate flow rates, dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and meteorological data (24 h and 2 week precipitation).
Sediment samples (500 g, Rilsan bags, Eurofins Environment, Norway) were collected from sedimentation ponds, if present, or by sandtraps in the underground culverts. The samples were placed in coolers with cooling elements and bubble wrap and shipped generally overnight and stored cold (ca. 4 °C) until analysis. To compliment this data, existing, recent PFAS data was also included when possible, provided by the site owners. These were obtained for four of the landfills from the same sampling points using similar protocols and analysis laboratories as in this study.
28 PFASs were quantified in leachate: short-chain PFCAs (PFBA, PFPeA and PFHxA), a short-chain PFSA (PFBS), long-chain PFCAs (PFHpA, HPFHpA, PFOA, PFNA, PFDA, PF-3,7-DMOA, PFUnDA, PFDoA, PFTrA, PFTA and PFHxDA), long-chain PFSAs (PFHxS, PFHpS, PFOS and PFDS), as well as fluorotelomer sulfonates (FTSAs: 4:2 FTSA, 6:2 FTSA and 8:2 FTSA), a fluorotelomer alcohol (FTOH: 8:2 FTOH) and PFOS-precursors (perfluorosulfonamides (FOSAs): FOSA, EtFOSA, MeFOSA and perfluoroalkylsulfonamide alcohols (FOSEs): EtFOSE and MeFOSE). In Table S3† the full names, PFAS class, and molecular formula for these are provided. In sediment, perfluorooctane sulfonamido acetic acids (FOSAAs) were also analysed (EtFOSAA, MeFOSAA and FOSAA). All sediment analyses and most leachate analyses (all except for leachate from landfill V and VIII), including the previous data provided by site owners, were carried out at the accredited laboratory Eurofins Environment Testing AS (sediment: centrifugation in methanol, followed ENVI-carb clean-up and UPLC/MS/MS analysis; leachate: analyzed by SPE-methanol elutriation followed by UPLC/MS/MS analysis, instrument: Agilent 6495 MS/MS. Column: Waters BEH 50 × 2.1 mm. Mobile phase: ammonium acetate (aq) and methanol). Due to logistical reasons, including contractual obligations, leachate from Landfill V and VIII were analyzed by the accredited ALS Laboratory Group Norway AS (method EPA537: SPE-methanol elutriation followed by LC/MS/MS analysis), which did not analyse PFBS, PFHpS, PFDS, PFBA, PFPeA, PFHpA, PFHxDA, 4:2 FTSA, HPFHpA and PF-3,7-DMOA.
ID | Year, month (n) | ∑Short-chain PFSAsa (<C6) | ∑Long-chain PFSAsb (≥C6) | ∑Short-chain PFCAsc (<C7) | ∑Long-chain PFCAsd (≥C7) | ∑Short-chain PFAS | ∑Long-chain PFAS | Short:long-chain ratio | PFOS | PFOA | ∑PFAS |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
a PFBS. b PFHxS, PFHpS and PFOS. c PFBA, PFPeA and PFHxA. d PFHpA, HPFHpA, PFOA, PFNA, PFDA, PFUnDA and PFDoA. e Sample analysis by ALS (different from others in this table); PFBS was not analysed in these samples, which could explain their relatively lower ∑short-chain concentrations. | |||||||||||
I | 2018, Jan. (1) | 30 | 51 | 140 | 85 | 170 | 140 | 1.3 | 29 | 66 | 320 |
I-S | 2017, Apr., June, Aug., Nov., 2018, May (5) | 24 ± 10 | 150 ± 210 | 160 ± 24 | 110 ± 17 | 180 ± 26 | 260 ± 210 | 0.70 ± 0.40 | 100 ± 140 | 69 ± 10 | 470 ± 240 |
II | 2018, April (1) | 260 | 90 | 240 | 140 | 500 | 230 | 2.1 | 70 | 94 | 780 |
II-S | 2016, April (1) | 320 | 110 | 260 | 170 | 580 | 280 | 2.1 | 74 | 100 | 900 |
III | 2018, April (1) | 100 | 110 | 250 | 180 | 350 | 290 | 1.2 | 70 | 120 | 670 |
III-S | 2018, April (1) | 110 | 110 | 260 | 200 | 370 | 310 | 1.2 | 65 | 130 | 740 |
IV | 2018, April (1) | 47 | 26 | 380 | 110 | 430 | 140 | 3.1 | 15 | 72 | 590 |
Ve | 2018, May (1) | n.a. | 87 | 68e | 98 | 68e | 190 | 0.37 | 51 | 98 | 432 |
VI | 2018, April (1) | 4200 | 200 | 2600 | 2700 | 6800 | 2900 | 2.3 | 120 | 1800 | 11000 |
VI-S | 2017, Sept. (1) | 660 | 73 | 490 | 420 | 1200 | 490 | 2.3 | 36 | 270 | 2500 |
VII | 2018, May (1) | 850 | 220 | 1900 | 1000 | 2800 | 1200 | 2.3 | 65 | 660 | 4200 |
VIIIe | 2018, May (1) | n.a. | 98 | 95e | 240 | 95e | 340 | 0.28 | 59 | 200 | 590 |
IX | 2018, May (1) | 7.3 | 71 | 130 | 210 | 130 | 280 | 0.47 | 36 | 170 | 420 |
X | 2018, June (1) | 7.2 | 200 | 130 | 200 | 130 | 400 | 0.33 | 160 | 120 | 540 |
Median | 2016–2018 (18) | 105 | 100 | 250 | 190 | 360 | 290 | 1.3 | 65 | 120 | 630 |
Mean ± SD | 550 ± 1200 | 110 ± 58 | 510 ± 760 | 420 ± 690 | 980 ± 1800 | 530 ± 730 | 1.8 ± 0.94 | 68 ± 38 | 280 ± 460 | 1700 ± 2900 | |
Min-max | 7.1–4200 | 26–220 | 68–2600 | 85–2700 | 68–6800 | 140–2900 | 0.28–3.1 | 15–160 | 66–1800 | 320–11000 | |
Most abundant | (PFBS) | PFOS | PFHxA | PFOA | PFBS | PFOA | — | — | — | PFBS |
For four of the landfills (I, II, III and VI), there was data available from previous, recent sampling campaigns for comparison. The concentrations for landfills I, II and III were quite similar from the current and previous campaign (generally within a factor 1.5 of each other, or not statistically different), though landfill VI exhibited substantially higher concentrations in the current April 2018 data compared to the previous September 2017 data. The only landfill with a time series available was Landfill I, having 6 time points from 2017 to 2018. This time series found more variation in long-chain PFAS concentrations (relative standard deviation, rsd, of 81%) compared to short-chain PFASs (rsd of 14%). Time trends in PFAS leachate concentrations were studied for a Canadian landfill by Benskin et al.,13 this study observed a peak in leachate emissions around mid-March to April for long-chain PFASs, but not for short-chain PFASs, which tended to be consistent throughout the year. Though the mechanisms of this are complex, and related to meteorological conditions (e.g. snow melt and precipitation), sorption and water properties (e.g. pH and ionic strength), less variability for short-chain PFASs than long-chain PFASs in landfill I is consistent with the Canadian landfill studied by Benskin et al.13 However, what is inconsistent is the apparent difference in both short-chain and long-chain PFASs observed in landfill VI between September 2017 to April 2018, where the September 2017 concentrations seems more of a diluted version compared to the April 2018 sample; and may simply be due to a dilution event e.g. storm water. Later in this manuscript a correlation analysis is presented to other leachate parameters (pH, DOC, EC and precipitation).
Regarding the second-aim of this study to see if short-chain PFAS dominate in leachate emissions, in six out of ten landfills, there were higher concentrations of short-chain PFASs than long-chain PFASs, with short-chain to long-chain ratios ranging from 0.28 to 3.1 (Table 1). Overall, the short-chain PFBS contributed most to the -concentration (30% based on mean concentrations). In leachate from Svalbard (landfill X), the major contributor was the long-chain PFOS (30%). At other landfills, PFOS contributed 1 to 20% of the . Relatively lower overall PFOS-abundance and higher abundance of short-chain PFASs (especially PFBS) could indicate that short-chain PFASs are now the major contributors in landfill leachate, supporting the study's hypothesis. The role of time trends could also be considered here, as mentioned above, Benskin et al.13 noticed a drop in long-chain PFASs after April, but not short-chain PFASs. Since sampling was mainly done in April, short-chain PFAS may have dominated further if sampling occurred later in the year. Sorption may also play a role. PFOS and other long-chain perfluoroalkyl acids sorb stronger to organic solids than some of their short-chain analogues;25–27 for instance, average observed organic carbon partition coefficient, Koc of PFOS and PFBS is 3.0 and 2.2, respectively.28,29 Thus one would expect long-chain PFASs to leach slower than short-chain PFASs. The relatively high abundance of short chain PFAS, particularly PFBS, in leachate demonstrates that considerable amounts of PFBS (and PFBS precursor) containing waste have been deposed of in Norwegian landfills. The presence of PFOS in the leachates shows that the phase-out in new commercial products has not reduced their concentrations in leachate entirely; due to both the presence in waste being currently deposited at the landfills, and the lag-time of leaching from waste previously landfilled. There were significant correlations between and several PFCAs (PFBA, PFPeA, PFHxA, PFHpA, PFOA, PFNA, PFDA), PFBS and 6:2 FTSA (Table S6†), indicating that these substances have correlating concentration and emission pathways across landfills.
In Table 2, leachate concentrations from the literature are compiled, in which it was possible for us to calculate the short-chain and long-chain concentrations and ratios in a manner similar to this study, because similar PFASs were analysed and the raw data was available. General caveats however with such comparisons are that the analysis methods can differ, PFASs analysed can differ, as can the type of leachate sampled (raw, diluted, treated), as indicated in Table 2, thus preventing exact comparisons, Eggen et al.19 using non-target analysis (Table 2) reported relatively high concentrations of 6123 ng L−1 for raw leachate in Norwegian landfills sampled in 2006 (which in comparison is higher than all landfills in this study except landfill VI), and a short- to long-chain ratio of 0.16; thus, indicating that short-chain PFASs have become more dominant in Norway recent years (though this data is influenced by a non-target analysis method being used).
Area, year (number of landfills/raw, diluted, mixed) | ∑Short-chain PFASs mean ± SD (min–max) | ∑Long-chain PFASs mean ± SD (min–max) | Short:long-chain ratio | n PFASs | Reference | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
a With the exclusion of PFHpS, HPFHpA, PF-3,7-DMOA, PFTA and PFHxDA; note this was measured using non-target analysis. b With the exclusion of PFHpS, HPFHpA, PFDA, PF-3,7-DMOA, PFTrA and PFHxDA. c With the exclusion of PFHpS, HPFHpA, PFOA, PFDA and PF-3,7-DMOA. d With the exclusion of HPFHpA, PF-3,7-DMOA and PFHxDA. | ||||||
Norway, 2017–2018 (10, mixed) | 980 ± 1800 (68–6800) | 530 ± 730 (140–2900) | 1.8 ± 0.94 (0.28–3.1) | 28 | 1700 ± 2900 (320–11000) | This study |
Norway, 2006 (2, raw) | 757 | 4784a | 0.16 | 16 | 6123 | Eggen et al., 201019 |
Canada, 2009 (1, raw) | 2812 ± 1109 (1424–5150) | 2719 ± 2160 (1021–7738)b | 1.0 | 24 | 11000 ± 10000 (3800–3600) | Benskin et al., 201213 |
Sweden, 2015 (10, unknown) | 171 ± 137 (<LOQ–508) | 123 ± 78 (<LOQ–269)c | 1.4 | 26 | 487 (0.30–1300) | Gobelius et al., 201823 |
Spain, 2015 (4, raw) | 576 ± 317 (125–852) | 506 ± 113 (413–663)d | 1.1 | 16 | 1082 (639–1379) | Fuertes et al., 201724 |
Benskin et al.13 reported higher concentrations in flow-through (raw) leachate from a landfill in Canada (11000 ± 10000 ng L−1) in 2010 than the Norwegian concentrations presented in this study. The mean short- to long-chain ratio was 1.0 in Benskin et al.,13 indicating short-chain PFASs were not dominant as in six of the landfills in this study. It is noteworthy that the short-chain PFBS was found in lower concentrations in this 2010 Canadian landfill (mean: 94 ± 41 ng L−1) than the mean of the 2018 Norwegian landfills (550 ± 1200 ng L−1); potentially indicating increased landfilling of PFBS.
A study of Swedish landfills analysed in 2015 (ref. 23) reported concentrations in the same range, although somewhat lower than this study (Table 2). The short- to long-chain ratio we calculate from their data was 1.4 (Table 2), which agrees with the general dominance of short-chain PFASs in landfills from this study. Four landfills from northern Spain were also sampled in 2015,24 and the concentration of s in raw leachate was in the same range as in this study (Table 2). The short- to long-chain ratio from the data in Fuertes et al.24 was 1.1 (Table 2).
There are other leachate studies in the literature; however, it is not as clear to calculate the short-chain:long-chain PFAS ratio as done here. Thus, instead the sum PFAS concentrations and the presence of short-chain PFAS are discussed. According to Kallenborn et al.,21 in landfill leachate from five Norwegian landfills in 2004 ranged from 199 to 1538 ng L−1 (mean: 673 ± 552, median: 468), which is lower than this study, but also with fewer PFASs, with many short-chain PFCAs not analysed for or found in low levels. A 2010 study of 22 landfills in Germany by Busch et al.17 reported in untreated leachate from 31 to 12922 ng L−1 (mean: 6086 ng L−1), which is relatively higher than the in this study, and perhaps influenced by including more congeners. This study reported short-chain PFASs were dominating, with the two most abundant congeners PFBA (mean contribution 27%) and PFBS (mean contribution 24%).17 In 2012, Li et al. published concentrations from 30 to 21000 ng L−1 in leachate from 28 landfills and dumpsites in Canada,18 these appeared dominated by long-chain PFCAs. In a study of four U.S. landfills sampled in 2006 by Huset et al.,15 ranged from 2688 to 7415 ng L−1 in raw leachates, though interestingly already with high concentration of PFBA (up to 1700 ± 63 ng L−1) and PFBS (up to 890 ± 100 ng L−1). In raw leachate from five municipal landfill sites in China, sampled in 2013, the concentrations in 2015 ranged from 7280 to 292000 ng L−1 (mean: 82100 ng L−1),22 which is much higher than this study. PFOA and PFBS were the most abundant.22 It appears from this review that short-chain PFBS and PFBA have been a dominant component of leachate in some areas since 2006, though in the more recent studies this seems to be more typically the case, as in Norway.
Fig. 1 Stacked bar chart of estimated yearly PFAS emissions (g per year, based on the amount of leachate generated at each landfill (Table S2†) and the concentrations in Table 1) of long-chain and short-chain perfluorinated sulfonates (PFSAs) and perfluoroalkyl carboxylic acids (PFCAs) for the Norwegian landfills in this study (Table S7†). |
It is important to bear in mind that there are several limitations to the emission estimates provided in the present study. These are (1) most sites had one sampling day, so seasonal, climate and hydrological factors could not be evaluated; (2) sampling occurred around April, which as discussed above is potentially when peak emissions for long-chain PFAS occur;13 (3) discharge volume is provided by the operators and their accuracy may vary; and (4) the leachate samples could to some degree be influenced by storm water and groundwater.
Comparisons with emission estimates in the literature need to take into account different PFASs being considered, as well as annual leachate volumes, which can vary tremendously. Therefore comparisons with emissions in the literature presented below must be considered with these limitations in mind. The study on Norwegian landfills in 2006 (ref. 19) reported emissions of 2.1 kg per year, which is higher than any of the landfills in the present study, due to relatively higher PFAS concentrations (Table 2), as well as a relatively large annual loading of 345000 m3 leachate per year.19 The study of the Canadian landfill in 201013 reported annual emissions from 8.5 to 25 kg per year (mean: 16 kg per year) which is considerably higher than the landfills in this study. This is mainly due to the high annual volume of leachate produced at the Canadian site, of 2.2 × 106 m3 per year,13 compared to volumes from 2.2 × 104 to 4.6 × 105 m3 per year in this study (Table S2†).
To extrapolate these results to the national level, which introduces new uncertainties, a previous report on leachate emissions in Norway concluded that a total volume of up to 1.0 × 107 m3 is emitted from Norwegian landfills, with 55% of emissions being sent to wastewater treatment plants (WTP) and 45% to the environment.30 Based on the mean concentrations provided in Table 1 multiplied by national leachate volume, this implies national release from Norwegian landfills from 3.2 to 110 kg per year (mean: 17 ± 29; median: 6.3 kg per year) (Table S8†). Considering the current Norwegian population is approximately 5.3 million, this would correspond to a mean per capita emission factor of 3.2 ± 5.5 mg per year per person. For short-chain PFASs these were from 0.68 to 68 kg per year (mean: 9.8 ± 18; median: 3.6 kg per year), and long-chain from 1.4 to 29 kg per year (mean: 5.3 ± 7.3; median: 2.9 kg per year) (Table S8†).
National estimates have also been presented for other countries, such as China,22 Germany,17 and the U.S.16 These were derived by multiplying average emission rates for landfills included in their study by the number of landfills in the country, rather than based on leachate volumes as here. For the purpose of comparison, the national emission levels are divided by population to give per capita emission factors. Yan et al.22 estimated in 2015 the Chinese national emission of to groundwater from landfill leachate to be 3110 kg per year, based on the mean concentration of 82100 ng L−1 from five municipal landfill sites in China, and the average amount of leachate generated per year (4.74 × 107 m3 per year), assuming that 80% of the landfills were not lined. This would correspond to 2.2 mg per person per year (assuming a Chinese population of 1.39 billion), which is similar to this study (though this study considered all aqueous emissions from landfills, not just groundwater emissions). The German national landfill emission in 2009 of was estimated at 88 kg per year,17 corresponding to 1.1 mg per person per year (assuming population 81.8 million in 2009). A 2013 survey of U.S. landfills estimated emissions from 563 to 638 kg per year,16 or 1.8 to 2.0 mg per person per year. A study from Spain24 estimated the annual discharge of from four landfill sites serving 1.8 million people was 1.2 kg per year, which implies an emission rate of 0.7 mg per person per year.
Despite limitations, this comparison resulted in per capita emission factors that were very similar of those that can be derived in other regions, from 0.7 (Northern Spain), 1.1 (German), 1.8–2.0 (U.S.), 2.2 to groundwater (China), to 3.2 (Norway) mg per day per person.
Compared to total per capita emission factors from all sources of PFAS, not just landfills, based on river and water treatment plant data in the literature, the contributions of landfills are relatively low. For instance, considering just PFOS, total per capita emissions from all sources for the EU in 2009 were estimated at 9.9 mg per year per person.31 In our 2018 study, Norwegian landfill emissions contribute roughly 0.35 mg per day per person emissions of PFOS, which would be 3.5% of the European per capita emissions in 2009. Total flux of sewage-derived PFOS from Japan was in 2008 estimated to be 3.6 tonnes per year, corresponding to 28 mg per year per person,32 which is almost two orders of magnitude higher than the per capita emission factors derived here. Part of this may be attributable to PFOS emissions having declined in recent years, since these other per capita emissions were derived.
ID | ∑Short-chain PFSAsa (<C6) | ∑Long-chain PFSAsb (≥C6) | ∑Short-chain PFCAsc (<C7) | ∑Long-chain PFCAsd (≥C7) | ∑Short-chain PFAS | ∑Long-chain PFAS | PFOS | PFOA | ∑PFOS precursorse | ∑PFAS |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
a PFBS. b PFHxS, PFOS and PFDS. c PFBA, PFPeA and PFHxA. d PFHpA, PFOA, PFNA, PFDA, PFUnDA, PFDoA and PFTrA. e The PFOS precursors, EtFOSAA, EtFOSE, MeFOSAA, MeFOSE and FOSAA, were only analyzed in sediments and not in leachate, and hence are not included in the ∑Short-chain and ∑Long-chain data for consistency. f X-I was sampled from the outlet of a leachate pond, at the same place as the leachate sample from landfill X. X–II was sampled from a stream downstream the leachate pond. | ||||||||||
I | <LOQ | 26 | <LOQ | 6.6 | <LOQ | 32 | 25 | 1.6 | 33 | 72 |
IV | <LOQ | 11 | 0.25 | 3.4 | 0.25 | 14 | 11 | 1.2 | 24 | 46 |
V | <LOQ | 14 | 0.49 | 1.9 | 0.49 | 16 | 14 | 1.3 | 12 | 37 |
VI | <LOQ | 1.3 | <LOQ | 0.69 | <LOQ | 2.0 | 1.3 | 0.21 | 0.74 | 8.8 |
VII | 3.3 | 9.4 | 4.9 | 7.5 | 8.2 | 17 | 9.0 | 3.6 | 84 | 120 |
IX | <LOQ | 15 | <LOQ | 1.8 | <LOQ | 17 | 15 | 1.8 | 7.9 | 40 |
X–If | <LOQ | 24 | <LOQ | 20 | <LOQ | 44 | 24 | 0.54 | 8.26 | 42 |
X–IIf | <LOQ | 3.9 | <LOQ | 1.4 | <LOQ | 5.3 | 3.9 | 0.23 | 0.59 | 8.5 |
Median | 3.3 | 13 | 0.49 | 2.6 | 0.49 | 16 | 13 | 1.3 | 10 | 41 |
Mean ± SD | 3.3 | 13 ± 8.7 | 1.9 ± 2.6 | 5.4 ± 6.4 | 3.0 ± 4.5 | 18 ± 14 | 13 ± 9 | 1.3 ± 1.1 | 21 ± 28 | 47 ± 36 |
Min–max | 3.3–3.3 | 1.3–26 | 0.25–4.9 | 0.69–20 | 0.25–8.2 | 2.0–44 | 1.3–25 | 0.21–3.6 | 0.59–84 | 8.5–120 |
Most abundant | (PFBS) | PFOS | PFHxA | PFUnDA | PFBS | PFOS | — | — | EtFOSAA | EtFOSAA |
Eggen et al.19 reported that long-chain PFCAs, FOSA and EtFOSA were detected at relatively high concentrations in sediment samples from a Norwegian landfill sampled in 2006, with total PFAS concentrations (dry weight) ranging from 1.3 to 382 μg kg−1 (mean: 61 μg kg−1), which is in the same range as this study (Table 3), indicating little change. According to a literature survey by the Norwegian Environment Agency from 2008,20 PFHxS and PFOS were detected in all sediment samples from 8 Norwegian landfills, wherein the ranged from approximately 0.0013 to 0.024 μg per kg d.w.,20 which is lower than the present study. However, it is noted that PFAS substances such as EtFOSAA and MeFOSAA were not measured in that study, whereas these were measured at relatively high concentrations in this study (Table 3).
In principle, factors such as pH, EC and DOC would influence the sorption of ionic PFASs. Thus, PCA biplots were made for the Qsed/leachate − values of PFOS and PFOA, where Qsed/leachate is considered a proxy for sorption. As their Qsed/leachate − values were strongly correlated (r = 0.9, p = 0.001), only the PCA-biplot with Qsed/leachate − values for PFOS is shown in Fig. S2.†Qsed/leachate and yearly leachate production volume were positively correlated, implying higher sorption to the sediment phase with increasing leachate volume. This could be accounted for by considering a Freundlich like sorption behaviour (i.e. sorption increases with increasing water to sediment ratios, leaving behind the more strongly sorbed residues). There were no significant correlations between Qsed/leachate and pH or DOC. However, there was a negative correlation between PFOS Qsed/leachate and EC, which indicates relatively less partitioning to the sediment phase with increasing EC. This could be accounted for by increasing competition for anionic sorption sites. It is not uncommon for leachate sediments to be rich in metal oxides,35 which can be positively-charged and therefore contain anion exchange sites, depending on the pH and salt composition. Studies by Wang et al.36,37 indicated that the sorption of PFOS and PFOA on the aluminium oxides boehmite and alumina decreased with increasing ionic strength. In contrast, negatively-charged clays like the phyllosilicate bentonite show negligible sorption of PFAS,38 and therefore would be less influenced by EC than positively-charged metal oxides. Thus, the stronger sorption with higher flow volumes and lower EC seems to match well with mechanistic expectations for a Freundlich like behaviour: dilution would lower EC and PFAS concentrations, and therefore increase sorption via less competition for anion-exchange sites to e.g. metal oxide surfaces.
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/c9em00170k |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2019 |