Project Summary/Abstract
Title Filtration Media for In-Home PFAS Removal from Drinking Water
SBIR Phase II Application
P.I.: Steven Dietz, TDA Research, Inc.
Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), also commonly known as perfluorinated compounds, are a large family
of man-made, globally distributed chemicals that have been used for decades. Perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) and
perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) are the most common PFAS, but thousands of other derivatives exist. PFAS have
been widely used in consumer products such as non-stick cookware (Teflon®), carpets and carpet treatment products
(Scotchgard®), food packaging, aqueous firefighting foams, hydraulic aviation fuels and in the aerospace,
automotive, construction, and electronics industries. PFAS are emerging environmental pollutants in groundwater,
and they are attracting significant attention due to their global distribution, persistence, toxicity and tendency to bio-
accumulate. PFAS contamination has been found in more than 1400 locations in 49 states and the EPA estimates that
the drinking water of more than 110 million Americans may already be contaminated. Once released into the
environment, they are not easily broken down by air, water, or sunlight. Thus, people can be exposed to PFAS that
were manufactured decades in the past. PFAS can travel long distances in the air and water, exposing people to PFAS
manufactured or emitted from facilities many miles away. Human exposure can also occur through contact with
products containing PFAS. In 2016, EPA established a lifetime health advisory (LHA) level of 70 parts per trillion
(ppt) for individual or combined concentrations of PFAS in drinking water and many states are establishing even
lower levels. Epidemiological studies have shown that the occurrence of PFAS in humans is linked to thyroid disease,
high cholesterol, ulcerative colitis, kidney cancer, testicular cancer, and pregnancy-induced hypertension. Current
water treatment technologies that can meet the EPA targets are not cost effective, especially for in-home use,
necessitating a need for technology/advanced materials to cleanup drinking water that are efficient, cost effective and
can meet the current EPA target of 70 ppt, the new lower New York state limit of 10 ppt and the likely even stricter
regulations that will follow.
TDA Research, Inc (TDA) proposes to develop an adsorption-based system for removing PFAS from drinking water
down to EPA prescribed limits of 70 ppt (parts per trillion) or lower. The key to such a system is a low cost, high
capacity adsorbent with fast kinetics to remove PFAS. TDA's sorbent uses a mesoporous carbon structure grafted
with Lewis base functionalized groups to remove PFAS via physical adsorption. The mesopores provides very fast
adsorption kinetics and accessibility to the functionalized adsorption sites. The strength of the Lewis acid-base
interaction can be tuned to allow the sorbent to be effective even in the presence of the multiple contaminants found
in drinking water. The fast adsorption and high PFAS capacity of the sorbent will reduce the system size and enable
their use in smaller home-based systems.
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