Regeneration of biochars (pristine and modified/engineered) and economic analysis of their use in the removal of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) from water/wastewater
. Department of Chemical Engineering, College of Engineering, Tuskegee University, Tuskegee, AL 36088, USA . Department of Biochemistry, Chemistry & Physics, Georgia Southern University, Savannah, GA 31419, USA . Department of Agricultural and Biological Engineering, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32611, USA
Currently, there is an increasing interest in developing efficient and cost-effective treatment technologies to remediate per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) in water. Biochars (pristine and modified/engineered) can be a good candidate among porous pyrogenic carbonaceous materials for the sorptive removal of PFAS from water/wastewater. There is a need to focus on developing efficient, environmentally friendly, and cost-effective techniques for desorbing PFAS from spent biochars (pristine and modified/engineered) to enable potential reuse or suitable disposal of these adsorbents, facilitating their future full-scale application in the water sector. This review article briefly compiles the state-of-the-art knowledge on the: (i) application of pristine and modified/engineered biochars for the sorptive removal of PFAS from aqueous samples; (ii) regeneration/reuse techniques for the spent biochars; and (iii) economic analysis of their use in PFAS removal from water/wastewater. Further investigations on (i) better modifying/engineering biochars to remove specially short-chain PFAS species in real environmental water samples due to challenging nature of their removal using conventional treatment technologies; (ii) feasible low-energy, environmentally friendly, and cost-effective strategies for regeneration/reuse of the spent biochars (pristine and modified/engineered) and management of their end-of-life; and (iii) large-scale and continuous column sorption operation for the real water/wastewater samples are still desirable to apply biochars for PFAS removal at full-scale in the future.
Shahryar Jafarinejad,Jianzhou He,Dengjun Wang. Regeneration of biochars (pristine and modified/engineered) and economic analysis of their use in the removal of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) from water/wastewater[J]. Front. Environ. Sci. Eng.,
2025, 19(2): 20.
Michigan, Human noncancer value for surface drinking water
2023
SW
Yes
66
11
Michigan, Screening levels
2019
DW
No
9
8
Michigan, Maximum contaminant level/Generic cleanup criteria
2021
DW/GW
Yes
8
16
Minnesota, Health risk limit - subchronic, chronic
2023
DW/GW
Yes
35
300
Minnesota, Health-based value–subchronic, chronic
2024
DW/GW
No
0.24
2.3
Minnesota, Health-based value–cancer
2024
DW/GW
No
0.0079
7.6
Minnesota, Water quality standard
2023
SW-lake
Yes/No
25
0.05
Montana, Water quality standard
2019
GW
Yes
70
70
Nevada, Basic comparison level
2023
DW
No
100
70
New Hampshire, Ambient groundwater quality standard
2019
GW
Yes
12
15
New Hampshire, Maximum contaminant level
2020
DW
Yes
12
15
New Jersey, Maximum contaminant level
2020
DW
Yes
14
13
New Mexico, Preliminary screening levels
2022
DW
No
60.2
60
New York, Maximum contaminant level
2020
DW
Yes
10
10
Ohio, Action level
2022
DW
Other
70
70
Oregon, Health advisory level
2021
DW
No
30
30
Pennsylvania, Medium-specific concentration
2021
GW
Other
14
18
Pennsylvania, Maximum contaminant level
2023
DW
Yes
14
18
Rhode Island, Groundwater quality standard
2023
DW/GW
Yes
20
20
Rhode Island, Maximum contaminant level
2022
DW
Yes
20
20
Rhode Island, Action level
2023
SW
Yes
70
70
Texas, Tier 1 protective concentration level
2023
GW
Yes
290
560
Vermont, Maximum contaminant level
2020
DW/GW
Yes
20
20
Vermont, Lifetime health advisory
2018
DW/GW
Yes
20
20
Vermont, Groundwater enforcement standard
2019
GW
Yes
20
20
Vermont, Preventive action level
2019
GW
Yes
2
2
Washington, State action level
2022
GW
Yes
10
15
Washington, State action level
2022
DW
Yes
10
15
Wisconsin, Maximum contaminant level
2022
DW
Other
70
70
Tab.1 The guideline values for perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) and perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) in groundwater (GW), drinking water (DW), and surface water (SW)/effluent in the United Sates
The removal efficiency (20%–60%) and sorption capacity (0–88 ng ∑PFAS/g biochar) for short-chain PFCAs (C3–C6) and PFSA (C4)The removal efficiency (90%–99%) and the sorption capacity (73–168 ng ∑PFAS/g biochar) for C7–C11 PFCAs, C6, C8 PFSAs, and FOSA
PFAS sorption to magnesium chloride-treated biochar was 17–25-fold higher than to sand
Sörengård et al. (2020)
Hardwood (oak)-based biochar
PFOA, PFHpA, PFHxA, PFPeA, PFBA, PFOS, PFHpS, PFHxS, and PFBS
Synthetic solution
Batch
About 60% removal of PFOA, 94% removal of PFOS, 17% removal of PFHpA, 60%–70% removal of PFHpS, 30%–40% removal of PFHxS, and 20% removal of PFBS by the mixture of zero-valent iron and biochar (ZVI + BC)
Liu et al. (2020)
Softwood-derived biochar
PFOA, PFOS, PFBA, and PFBS
Synthetic solution
Batch
The maximum Langmuir sorption capacity for PFOA (52.08 ± 14.8?µmol/g), PFOS (70.42 ± 21.5 µmol/g), PFBA (48.31 ± 12.2 µmol/g), and PFBS (23.36 ± 7.4 µmol/g)
Zhang et al. (2021)
Activated spent coffee grounds biochar or SCGKOH (produced from a 1:1 mass ratio of pyrolyzed spent coffee grounds and potassium hydroxide)
PFOS
Synthetic solution
Batch
Sorption capacity of 43.4 mg/g
Steigerwald and Ray (2021)
Reed straw-derived biochar
PFBA, PFBS, PFHxA, PFHxS, PFOA, and PFOS
Synthetic solution and PFAS-spiked groundwater
Batch and column
Batch: 92%–96% removal efficiency for three short-chain PFAS (i.e., PFBA, PFBS, and PFHxA) Column: effective removal using reed straw-derived biochar-packed filter with the flow rate up to 45 mL/min
Liu et al. (2021)
Commercial Douglas fir biochar (BC) and Fe3O4-containing BC (Fe3O4/BC)
PFOS and PFOA
Synthetic solution
Batch
Sorption capacities of PFOS were 7–14.6 mg/g BC and 6.2–10.7 mg/g Fe3O4/BCSorption capacities of PFOA were 3.9–9 mg/g BC and 5.4–652 mg/g Fe3O4/BC
Rodrigo et al. (2022)
Sugarcane biochar
19 PFAS including 11 PFCAs (C3–C13) and 8 PFSAs (C4–C12)
PFAS-spiked Milli-Q water and aqueous film-forming foams-impacted groundwater
Column
1.3-fold higher sorption of PFSAs by biochar compared to PFCAs
Vo et al. (2022)
Non-modified biochars and engineered biochars using different feedstocks (switchgrass, water oak, and biosolid) and additives (FeCl3 and carbon nanotube)
PFOA
Synthetic solution
Batch
Sorption capacity of PFOA in the range of 39.54–469.65 μmol/g Better sorption capacities for PFOA using biosolid biochar and Fe-impregnated biochar
Wu et al. (2022)
Two halophyte biochars and cow bone biochar
PFOA, PFOS, and PFHxS
Brackish groundwater
Batch
All PFOS and PFHxS removal and 86% removal of PFOA by one of the halophyte biochars (at a dose of 1000 mg/L)
Papes (2022)
Commercial biochar and biochars from corn, Douglas fir, eucalyptus, poplar, and switchgrass
PFOS
Synthetic solution
Batch
Over 95% PFOS removal using Douglas fir biochar, poplar biochar, and commercial biochar
Krebsbach et al. (2023a)
Unmodified biochar and modified biochars (post-pyrolysis air oxidation-treated biochar and poly(dimethyldiallylammonium) chloride (pDADMAC)-coated biochar)
Coating with pDADMAC enhanced PFAS sorption by a factor of 10–3000
Wang et al. (2023a)
Commercial biochar (CB) and biosolids biochar (BB)
PFOA, PFOS, and PFHxS
Synthetic solution
Batch
CB outperformed BB with 88.06%–100% and 59.09–100% PFAS sorption in the single and multiple PFAS adsorption experiments, respectively
Nguyen et al. (2023)
Biochar and biochar-polymer composite (BC-P(SB-co-AM))
PFOS, PFOA, PFBA, and PFBS
Synthetic solution
Batch
The maximum sorption capacities of PFOS, PFOA, PFBS, and PFBA were 634, 536, 301, and 264 mg/g, respectively for BC-P(SB-co-AM)
Deng et al. (2023)
Polypyrrole/biochar (PPy/BC) composites
PFOS, PFOA, PFBA, and PFBS
Synthetic solution and river surface water
Batch
Sorption capacities of PFBA, PFBS, PFOA, and PFOS were 3.89, 1.53, 2.55, and 1.22 mmol/g, respectively.Above 95% removal of multiple PFAS from actual PFAS-contaminated surface water
Yu et al. (2023)
Biochar-alginate composite beads
PFOS and PFBS
Synthetic solution
Batch
Up to 99% removal efficiency of PFOS using 1.5 g/L of biochar-alginate composite beads in less than16 h
Militao et al. (2023)
Modified biochars prepared from different biomass materials (straw, wood chips, sludge, and chicken manure) and modification methods (e.g., acid (hydrochloric acid), alkali (sodium hydroxide), and oxidant (potassium permanganate) modifications)
PFOS and PFOA
Synthetic solution
Batch
Theoretical maximum sorption capacities of PFOS and PFOA were 72.17 and 45.88 mg/g, respectively for the acid-modified, 300 °C pyrolyzed, sludge-derived biochar
Zhang et al. (2023)
Raw softwood (mixed species) or hardwood (maple)-derived biochars and post-pyrolysis air oxidation (PPAO)-treated biochars
PPAO treatment can significantly enhance the sorption potential of biochars
Wang et al. (2023b)
Construction and demolition debris-wood-derived biochar
92 PFAS
Landfill leachate
Batch and column
Batch: achieving a maximum of 29% PFAS reduction compared to controlsColumn: Producing leachates with PFAS concentrations 50%–80% higher than those in control columns
Cerlanek et al. (2024)
Tab.2 Recent studies on the application of pristine and modified/engineered biochars for the sorptive remediation of PFAS from aqueous samples
Adsorbents
Target PFAS
Regeneration technique
Regeneration results
Reference
Biochar (BC) and Fe3O4-containing BC (Fe3O4/BC)
PFOS and PFOA
Chemical regeneration using methanol
Better cyclic sorption-desorption for PFOS compared to PFOASimilar results in cyclic uptake-recovery tests with PFOS for BC and Fe3O4/BC despite slight capacity differences in desorptionBC and Fe3O4/BC can be utilized for several sorption cycles
Chemical regeneration using a 70% methanol, 1% sodium chloride solution
Successful regeneration of spent adsorbents
Steigerwald (2022)
Polypyrrole/biochar (PPy/BC) composites
PFOS, PFOA, PFBA, and PFBS
Chemical regeneration using different solvents (e.g., methanol, acetonitrile, methanol solution containing 1 mol/L sodium hydroxide, 70% methanol solution containing 1 mol/L sodium hydroxide, and single 1 mol/L sodium hydroxide solution)
Methanol as the optimal regeneration agentSuitable regeneration/reuse of spent PPy/BC composites at least five times
Yu et al. (2023)
Biochar and biochar-polymer composite (BC-P(SB-co-AM))
PFOS, PFOA, PFBA, and PFBS
Chemical regeneration using sodium chloride, sodium iodide, sodium hydroxide, and ethanol
Sorption efficiency following regeneration using sodium chloride, sodium iodide, sodium hydroxide, and ethanol were 1.3%–3.6%, 1.1%–2.2%, 3.8%–20.6%, and 11.2%–26.9%, respectively
Deng et al. (2023)
Biochar and biochar-polymer composite (BC-P(SB-co-AM))
PFOS, PFOA, PFBA, and PFBS
Vacuum-ultraviolet (VUV)/sulfite reduction system
Removal efficiency of PFOS (80.8%), PFOA (90.4%), PFBS (58.8%), and PFBA (70.6%) after the first regenerationRemoval efficiency of PFOS (56.2%), PFOA (55.7%), PFBS (29.6%), and PFBA (45.1%) after the third regenerationRemoval efficiency of PFOS (33.8%), PFOA (40.2%), PFBS (23.4%), and PFBA (31.8%) after the fourth regeneration
Deng et al. (2023)
Biochar and biochar-polymer composite (BC-P(SB-co-AM))
PFOS, PFOA, PFBA, and PFBS
Heat treatment (heating saturated adsorbent with PFAS in a regeneration solution at 50 °C for 12 h)
The removal efficiencies of PFOS, PFOA, PFBS, and PFBA were 78.3%, 82.2%, 65.8%, and 60.8%, respectively for the regenerated adsorbentThe removal efficiency of long-chain PFAS was greater than 60% after five cyclesThe removal efficiencies of PFOS, PFOA, PFBS, and PFBA were 96.2%, 94.3%, 90.8%, and 85.8%, respectively after first regeneration using heat treatment combined with sodium iodide and sodium hydroxide solution. Also, the removal efficiency was greater than 70% after five cycles
Deng et al. (2023)
Softwood (pyrolyzed at 600 °C)-post-pyrolysis air oxidation (PPAO)-treated biochar
Reactivated softwood (pyrolyzed at 600 °C)-PPAO-treated biochar showed greater PFAS KD values compared to that of the original
Wang et al. (2023b)
Tab.3 Recent regeneration studies on pristine and modified/engineered biochars
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