NCSU Baker Lab - Pine Needle PFAS

NCSU Baker Lab - Pine Needle PFAS
Utilizing Pine Needles to Temporally and Spatially Profile Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances (PFAS)
  • Instrument: 6560 Q-TOF LC/MS
  • SpikeIn: Yes
  • Keywords: PFAS, ion mobility, biomonitoring
  • Lab head: Erin Baker Submitter: Kaylie Kirkwood
Abstract
Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) are a class of manmade organofluorine chemicals used in a variety of household and industrial applications. PFAS have become a global concern due to their environmental persistence, bioaccumulative nature, and associations with adverse health effects, thus monitoring both spatial and temporal PFAS presence is crucial. PFAS levels are commonly monitored in surface and groundwater, soil, and wildlife samples, however assessing atmospheric PFAS is less common due to the necessary expensive equipment which can only be placed at a limited number of sites. Recently, the passive sampling capabilities of trees have been investigated to address this challenge. For example, pine needles possess highly adsorptive wax cuticles and have been effective passive samplers for a wide variety of environmental contaminants, including legacy PFAS or PFAS compounds with long aliphatic chains. To understand PFAS contamination in North Carolina from point sources such as a fluorochemical manufacturer, military bases, and airports, we leveraged the passive sampling capabilities of pine needles. The PFAS in the needles were extracted with an optimized protocol and analyzed using a non-targeted platform coupling liquid chromatography, ion mobility spectrometry and mass spectrometry (LC-IMS-MS) separations, allowing simultaneous hydrophobicity, size, and mass evaluations. This new method resulted in the identification of over 60 PFAS compounds in the pine needles, along with the detection of more than 10 unknown PFAS species. Furthermore, the detected species covered all of the legacy compounds identified in previous studies, as well as multiple classes of emerging PFAS with shorter aliphatic chains and structural modifications such as ether linkages and branched or cyclic aliphatic chains, not previously detected in pine needles. This method was also successful in identifying multiple PFAS point sources, as well as longitudinally monitoring the levels of the diverse PFAS compounds across North Carolina to address environmental concentration changes due to introduction and remediation efforts. Additionally, archived pine needles were analyzed to assess historical PFAS levels from the 1960s-2000s.
Experiment Description
Pine needles were collected from multiple locations across North Carolina (NC) over four years. Additionally, archived needles dating back to the 1960s were obtained from the NCSC and Duke herbaria to evaluate historical PFAS levels. An optimized solid-phase extraction (SPE) method was utilized to extract PFAS from the needles following spike-in of labeled internal standards. A non-targeted platform coupling liquid chromatography, ion mobility spectrometry, and mass spectrometry (LC-IMS-MS) separations was then used to perform hydrophobicity, size, and mass evaluations. The addition of the IMS dimension enabled separation of PFAS from matrix biomolecules, isomer separations, and increased identification confidence. The resulting data was analyzed using a Skyline library with LC-IMS-MS characteristics for over 100 PFAS standards and plotted with ToxPi*ArcGIS software.
Sample Description
Needles were collected from central and southeastern North Carolina Pinus taeda and Pinus palustris trees on public land. Archived needles were obtained from either the Duke University Herbarium or the North Carolina State University (NCSC) Herbarium.
Created on 8/16/21, 1:59 PM
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PFAS_Pine_Temporal_ArchivedSamples_2021-08-16_11-55-53.sky.zip2021-08-16 13:59:249056565620
PFAS_Pine_Spatial_FieldSamples_2021-08-16_11-52-29.sky.zip2021-08-16 13:59:249088888850