Hi All,
I’ve recently become concerned about PFAS contamination from PTFE stopcocks when using a separatory funnel during A/B extractions.
PFAS stands for “polyfluoro alkyl substances” which consists of a bunch of short to medium chain (C4-C10 say) molecules with various polar ends (sulfonate, carboxyl). I think there’s potential for PFOS and probably other PFAS contamination from the PTFE stopcock.
From Wikipedia:
Because PTFE is poorly soluble in almost all solvents, the polymerization is conducted as an emulsion in water. This process gives a suspension of polymer particles. Alternatively, the polymerization is conducted using a surfactant such as perfluorooctanesulfonic acid (PFOS).
I checked out the LogP for PFOS using miLogP and the ionized (basified) version of PFOS (sulfonate) has a LogP estimated at 1.74 (for reference, DMT has a LogP of -1.22 when ionized (acidified) and 2.30 when neutral (basified) according to the model). LogP ranges typically are from -3 (polar) to 7 (nonpolar). So it sounds like PFOS and maybe similar PFAS would prefer the nonpolar solvent in an A/B? But PFOS is a surfactant - and a really good one, so I’m not sure miLogP is accurate. Octonol-water partition coefficients can’t be measured for PFOS because it just forms an emulsion.
I believe there’s a potential for at least some PFAS to be extracted by naphtha, be it PFOS or whatever PFAS might be present within the PTFE matrix. PTFE resistance to naphtha is rated as “B-Good” as opposed to “A-Excellent” meaning there’s at least some degradation/interaction occurring.
https://www.calpaclab.co...flon-ptfe-compatibility/ I guess there’s no way to know for sure without analytical data, and that will be tough to come by as PFAS analysis is done by isotope dilution and costs about $300 per sample.
There have been documented instances of harm where Teflon or PFAS coated pans were left unattended and began to smoke, with people having negative effects from the PFAS degradation fumes. These fumes are acutely toxic to birds, and there have been many documented cases of birds dying from being near fuming pans!
Overall I’m not familiar enough with the comparison between PFAS as dissolved, aqueous molecules vs the extractability of PFAS from PTFE (but something must be dissolved by the naphtha if PTFE is rated as "B-Good" resistance). I’m imagining you could only extract very short-chain (hydrophobic) PFAS from PTFE if present, and those short-chain PFAS (like 1-4 carbons) aren’t as toxic as the 7-9 carbon range, though they wouldn't have any polarity either. But they would seem to get into freebase products, especially if the naphtha is evaporated. Maybe the wise thing to do is finish with a defat step on the final product, then a mini A/B to freebase?
The tough part about making assumptions is the concentrations of interest. EPA and states are regulating PFAS compounds in drinking water these days at the 20-70 parts-per-trillion range! So 1 mg of PFAS in your 50 mg dose is only a 2% contaminant but waaaay more PFAS than you want to be exposing yourself to (at least the more toxic of the PFAS).
Interested to hear anyone’s thoughts/concerns!