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Molecular chain length determines how 'forever chemicals' move in water

Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, or PFAS, are not a uniform threat. A study from Hanyang University reveals that the length of a molecule’s fluorinated carbon chain dictates how far these persistent contaminants travel and how effectively they can be removed from public drinking water supplies.

Bio & NewsJune 29, 2026801 reads0

Long-chain PFAS compounds bind readily to sediments and biological tissues, which makes them easier to capture using conventional filtration methods. However, their shorter-chain counterparts remain highly soluble, allowing them to migrate rapidly through groundwater and river systems. This mobility poses a significant challenge for existing water treatment infrastructure, as short-chain variants consistently resist standard removal techniques like activated carbon adsorption.

Professor Eilhann E. Kwon and his team at Hanyang University synthesized environmental, laboratory, and modeling data to map these behavioral patterns. Their findings, published in npj Clean Water, emphasize that water utilities must abandon one-size-fits-all strategies. As industries increasingly pivot toward short-chain PFAS as replacements for older compounds, the need for treatment systems tailored to specific molecular characteristics becomes critical. According to first author Dr. Youn-Jun Lee, integrating this chain-length data into infrastructure design over the coming decade will be essential for developing systems capable of capturing and destroying a broader spectrum of synthetic pollutants.

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