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Scientists find new way to break down PFAS 'forever chemicals'


Quantum dots help destroy 'forever chemicals' with light | New Scientist

Efforts to clean up PFAS contamination are under way, but most methods of destroying the molecules require extreme heat or pressure, or ...

Researchers Develop New Way to Filter Forever Chemicals from ...

Reuther and his research group are developing a sustainable water filtration system that can remove per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS).

100% of toxic "forever chemicals" break down overnight ... - New Atlas

Scientists in Japan have developed a new method for breaking down toxic “forever chemicals” quickly and at room temperature.

New 'forever chemical' cleanup strategy discovered | ScienceDaily

It breaks up strong fluorine-to-carbon bonds in the PFAS compounds and other concentrated organic compounds in heavily polluted water. The ...

Scientists Discover Way to Destroy Harmful “Forever Chemicals” in ...

New technology could help water utilities remove stubborn PFAS chemicals linked to cancer and other maladies.

Scientists uncover microbes that destroy 'forever chemical' pollutants

Little is known about the fate of PFAS in our environment, but new research finds that bacteria in wastewater can degrade specific types of ...

The race to destroy PFAS, the forever chemicals

PFAS compounds have been linked to a number of health conditions. They are aren't broken down in our bodies or in the environment, ...

Scientists Identify Bacteria That Can Break Down 'Forever Chemicals'

Researchers have identified soil bacteria able to break down some PFAS chemicals, known as “forever chemicals” because they take decades to degrade naturally.

Sandia scientists achieve breakthrough in tackling PFAS ...

They are also known as “forever chemicals” because they do not break down in the environment but can move through soil and water and build up in ...

Canada: scientists discover new method to break down toxic 'forever ...

To destroy the chemicals, Mohseni says researchers use either electrochemical or photochemical processes to break the carbon-fluorine bond. The ...

How to take 'forever' out of forever chemicals - Nature

But 'forever' might be a shorter time than previously thought. Scientists, including Thagard, are developing methods to break down PFAS into ...

Chemists discover new method to destroy "forever chemicals" - Axios

Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) — dubbed "forever chemicals" for their durability — are a family of nearly 5,000 types of chemicals ...

Scientists have discovered a way to destroy those harmful PFAS ...

PFAS chemicals seemed like a good idea at first. · Then tests started detecting · The · PFAS can get into soil through land application of ...

'Forever chemicals' destroyed by simple method | NSF

PFAS, manufactured chemicals commonly used since the 1940s in nonstick and waterproofing agents, are called "forever chemicals" for good ...

New Method Can Break Down 95% of Toxic 'Forever Chemicals' in ...

Scientists have discovered a new way to break apart 'forever chemicals', the notoriously stubborn pollutants that contaminate our waterways ...

How to Destroy 'Forever Chemicals' | Scientific American

Health-damaging PFASs are nearly impossible to break down—but a new hot-water technique can destroy them.

Competition to destroy 'forever chemicals' heats up - C&EN

“Those electrons will almost immediately break the carbon-fluorine bond if we're able to get PFAS onto the anode surface,” she says. Mullen won' ...

Colorado School of Mines researchers patent new process to ...

Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, or PFAS, are called forever chemicals, because of their tough durability and difficulty breaking down in ...

Finding PFAS Wherever They're Hiding | NIST

NIST scientists are helping reveal tiny amounts of 'forever chemicals' in our food, water, clothing and environment.

How to break down PFAS or per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances

They can be found in almost every household product. They are so difficult to break down that they're often called “forever chemicals.” ...