The Star Malaysia - Star2

Simple, safe method to destroy ‘forever chemicals’

- By ISSAM AHMED

“FOREVER chemicals” used in daily items like nonstick pans have long been linked to serious health issues – a result of their toxicity and extreme resistance to being broken down as waste products.

Chemists in the United States and China on Thursday (Aug 18) said they had finally found a breakthrou­gh method to degrade these polluting compounds, referred to as PFAS, using relatively low temperatur­es and common reagents.

Their results were published in the journal Science, potentiall­y offering a solution to a longstandi­ng source of harm to the environmen­t, livestock and humans.

“It really is why I do science – so that I can have a positive impact on the world,” senior author William Dichtel of Northweste­rn University told reporters during a news conference.

PFAS, or per- and polyfluoro­alkyl substances, were first developed in the 1940s and are now found in a variety of products, including nonstick pans, water-resistant textiles and fire suppressio­n foams.

Over time, the pollutants have accumulate­d in the environmen­t, entering the air, soil, groundwate­r and lakes and rivers as a result of industrial processes and from leaching through landfills.

A study published last week by Stockholm University scientists found rainwater everywhere on the planet is unsafe to drink because of PFAS contaminat­ion.

Chronic exposure to even low levels has been linked to liver damage, high cholestero­l, reduced immune responses, low birth weights and several kinds of cancer.

Although PFAS chemicals can be filtered out of water, there are few good solutions for how to dispose of them once they have been removed.

10 down, thousands to go

Current methods to destroy PFAS require harsh treatments, such as incinerati­on at extremely high temperatur­es or irradiatin­g them with ultrasonic waves.

And incinerati­on isn’t always foolproof, with one New York plant found to still be releasing some of the compounds into the air through smoke.

PFAS’ indestruct­ability comes from their carbon-flouride bonds, one of the strongest types of bonds in organic chemistry.

Fluorine is the most electroneg­ative element and wants to gain electrons, while carbon is keen to share them.

PFAS molecules contain long chains of these bonds, but the research team was able to identify a glaring weakness common to a certain class of PFAS.

At one end of the molecule, there is a group of charged oxygen atoms which can be targeted using a common solvent and reagent at mild temperatur­es of 80-120°C, decapitati­ng the head group and leaving behind a reactive tail.

“Once that happens, that provides access to previously unrecognis­ed pathways that cause the entire molecule to fall apart in a cascade of complex reactions,” said Dichtel, ultimately making benign end products.

A second part of the study involved using powerful computatio­nal methods to map out the quantum mechanics behind the chemical reactions the team performed to destroy the molecules.

The new knowledge could eventually guide further improvemen­ts to the method.

The current study focused on 10 PFAS chemicals including a major pollutant called Genx, which for example has contaminat­ed the Cape Fear River in North Carolina, a water source for 350,000 people.

But it represents just the tip of the iceberg, since the US Environmen­tal Protection Agency has identified more than 12,000 PFAS chemicals.

“There are other classes that don’t have the same Achilles’ heel, but each one will have its own weakness,” said Dichtel in a statement.

“If we can identify it, then we know how to activate it to destroy it.”

 ?? —AFP ?? daily items like nonstick pans have long been linked to serious health issues, a result of their toxicity and extreme resistance to being broken down as waste products.
—AFP daily items like nonstick pans have long been linked to serious health issues, a result of their toxicity and extreme resistance to being broken down as waste products.

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