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Perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) adsorption on Fe-rich mineral assemblages and soils: experiments and surface complexation modeling
Perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) adsorption on Fe-rich mineral assemblages and soils: experiments and surface complexation modeling
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Perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) adsorption on Fe-rich mineral assemblages and soils: experiments and surface complexation modeling
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Perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) adsorption on Fe-rich mineral assemblages and soils: experiments and surface complexation modeling
Perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) adsorption on Fe-rich mineral assemblages and soils: experiments and surface complexation modeling

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Perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) adsorption on Fe-rich mineral assemblages and soils: experiments and surface complexation modeling
Perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) adsorption on Fe-rich mineral assemblages and soils: experiments and surface complexation modeling
Journal Article

Perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) adsorption on Fe-rich mineral assemblages and soils: experiments and surface complexation modeling

2025
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Overview
Perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) is an emerging contaminant frequently detected in subsurface environments, raising significant concern due to its environmental persistence, mobility, and potential human health impacts. This study examines PFOS adsorption onto a range of solid substrates, including pure minerals, mineral assemblages, and natural soils. Specifically, the adsorption behavior of 2-line ferrihydrite, ferrihydrite-coated sand, and soil collected from a PFOS-impacted site in Killingworth, Connecticut was investigated to evaluate their capacity to retain PFOS under varying geochemical conditions. By integrating batch adsorption experiments with surface complexation modeling (SCM) and applying the component additivity approach, this study elucidates the reactive transport mechanisms governing PFOS behavior under a range of geochemical conditions. Our findings demonstrate that PFOS adsorption occurs significantly on both ferrihydrite and quartz surfaces, with the ferrihydrite-coated sand and soil exhibiting retention behavior attributable to contributions from both mineral phases. At lower pH values, sorption is predominantly governed by outer-sphere complexation driven by the surface charge characteristics of ferrihydrite. Specifically, under acidic conditions (pH < 5.5 for ferrihydrite-coated sand and pH < 6.0 for soil), PFOS retention is primarily facilitated through an outer-sphere hydrogen-bonded complex at ferrihydrite’s surface, while a secondary outer-sphere complex involving Na + co-adsorption contributes to a lesser extent. At elevated pH levels, however, electrostatic interactions become less favorable, and non-electrostatic hydrophobic interactions with quartz surfaces become increasingly dominant, highlighting the transition in sorption mechanisms from charge-driven to hydrophobic partitioning under neutral to alkaline conditions. A comparison with traditional partitioning coefficients (K d ) revealed that their variability closely corresponds with changes in dominant surface complexes across different pH conditions. Given the critical role of solid-phase partitioning in governing PFAS transport in the subsurface, enhanced predictive capabilities are essential for advancing site-specific risk assessments and informing management strategies aimed at protecting both public and private water resources. Graphical abstract