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PFAS - come to stay

Due to their water, dirt and grease-repellent properties, representatives of perfluorinated and polyfluorinated alkyl substances (PFAS, also known as PFC - perfluorinated and polyfluorinated chemicals) can be found in a variety of everyday products such as outdoor jackets, Teflon pans or coffee-to-go cups, but also in fire extinguishing foams. The PFAS group now includes more than 4,700 different substances.

In chemical terms, these are organic compounds with different chain lengths in which the hydrogen atoms have been partially (polyfluorinated) or completely (perfluorinated) replaced by fluorine atoms. These carbon chains still have acid or alcohol groups. The bond between the carbon and fluorine atoms can only be destroyed again with a high energy input, e.g. in waste incineration plants. Complete bacteriological or photochemical degradation is not possible.

As these substances do not degrade in nature and therefore remain in the environment for a long time and are also highly mobile, they pose a significant environmental problem. Some PFAS can accumulate in plants, animals and humans and are also harmful to health. PFAS can be released into the environment, for example, from the exhaust air of industrial processes, but also from the domestic environment, e.g. from impregnation sprays, via vapours from dirt-repellent treated textiles or via waste water and the resulting sewage sludge, and thus enter the food chain. PFAS also become problematic because some of them bind to proteins in the human body and are sometimes passed on to the child in increased concentrations during pregnancy or breastfeeding.

In addition to Europe-wide, partially increased contamination of groundwater by PFAS, studies have shown that they can be detected everywhere in the soil. Studies in the Arctic show that PFAS can be detected in fresh water as well as in marine waters, glaciers, air and snow, but also in fish, whales, birds and even phytoplankton.

Five PFAS hotspots are currently known in Germany. Currently, PFAS-contaminated soils can only be remediated by high-temperature treatment; in the case of contaminated groundwater, purification with activated carbon is generally possible.

PFAS is just one of many pollutants that the MuP Group plans to remove from the environment as part of remediation measures and thus make our world a little better. Engineering for a better Tomorrow.

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