PFAS Sampling Techniques: Best Practices Fo​r Water & Wastewater Collection​

Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) are an increasing health and environmental concern in the scientific community, and that concern is escalating among industrial, municipal and regulatory audiences.

PFAS sampling is the process of collecting surface water, wastewater, or soil samples to detect and measure these persistent chemicals. This helps identify contamination sources, assess exposure risks, and inform remediation efforts. Given the widespread use of PFAS in various products and their potential health impacts, accurate sampling is crucial for protecting public water supplies and guiding regulatory decisions.

In the interest of public health and safety, Teledyne ISCO has developed best practices and special sampling kits for sample collection for PFAS in water and wastewater.

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A How-To for Sampling Water & Wastewater to Detect PFAS

PFAS can be detected in trace amounts in water and wastewater, but obtaining an accurate assessment is a challenge due to the widespread nature of the chemicals. Exacting steps must be taken before, during and after samples are obtained to ensure they are not compromised.

As experts in water and wastewater sampling and flowrate measurement for more than 60 years, Teledyne ISCO is uniquely qualified to assist in determining and implementing best practices that take much of the guesswork, wasted time, unnecessary expenses, and inaccurate analysis due to compromised samples out of the equation.

For more detailed information specific to your application, contact our Water Product Support team at [email protected] or in the United States, toll-free at 866-209-6174.

Equipment Choices/Material Selection

PFAS sampling is conducted similarly to other sampling projects. Due to the prevalence of PFAS in our environments and the extremely small quantitative measurements (0.02 ppt) in the EPA guidelines, the potential for cross-contamination is significant. Therefore, greater care is required to avoid compromising the quality of the collected water sample.

Sources of contamination

Avoid the following before and during sampling or while at the sampling site. While not an exhaustive list, these points demonstrate the prevalence of PFAS and the care that must be taken.

Personal sources of contamination: soaps, shampoos, insect repellants, sunscreen, moisturizing lotion, cosmetics, some toothpastes
Clothing washed with fabric softeners or marked as stain-resistant/waterproof
Fast food containers/packaging, food or drink in sealed packages (e.g., juice boxes)
Materials that are NOT in direct contact with the sample but should be avoided include: GPS receivers, notebooks, clipboards, etc.

Please note that PPE could contain PFAS. However, never compromise safety for the sake of eliminating PFAS material. If there is no equivalent PFAS-free option available, document the use of such and use a blank sample  to establish a baseline presence of PFAS with the equipment and the exposure potential.

Materials to use or avoid in sampler parts

At the top of the list of materials that must be avoided, DO NOT USE PTFE or FEP tubing or any tubing that contains fluoride for suction line or any part of the sampler equipment. Use high-density polyethylene (HDPE) sample collection bottles. Avoid low-density polyethylene (LDPE) unless verified to be PFAS-free.

Approved Materials

Materials to avoid or use with caution

  • LDPE (unless PFAS-free verified)
  • Glass (unless PFAS-free verified)
  • Teflon or related materials
  • Any fluoropolymer materials
  • Gel-Paks

Equipment considerations

  • Sampling equipment should be dedicated to sampling PFAS.
  • Decontamination is a MUST due to the sensitive nature and cross-contamination threat. This is often accomplished by a thorough rinse of the sample lines using known PFAS-free water.
  • Communicate with your analytical laboratory and appropriate regulatory agency for their specific decontamination recommendations. ​​​
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Grab samples increase the risk of cross-contamination due to the direct human contact with the act of collecting the sample. Automated sampling results in consistent samples and eliminates variances that can impact sample integrity. ​​​

​Auto​matic Sampler Factors

Composite sampling is most common. Time-paced is common but there are those who flow-pace as well, assuming there is a flowmeter in place to perform that function.

Blanks

Prepare three types of equipment blanks before and after sample collection using PFAS-free deionized water:

  • Equipment Rinse Blank
  • Field Blank
  • Trip Blank

These blanks ensure sampling components are not contributing to false readings or elevated PFAS detection. Consult specific guidelines for procedures on equipment cleansing and blank preparation.

Click here to find details on equipment cleansing and taking blanks

Programming approaches

  • Could one day be regulatory driven, but currently, normal approaches for programming are acceptable.
  • Time paced: common is one sample every 15 minutes for 24 hours
  • Flow paced: It is common to design a program that will collect 96 samples based upon average daily flow volume over 24 hours (Note: Flow pacing is not suitable for applications that have a wide range of daily volumes.)

The future: Regulatory Considerations

The EPA is expected to develop more comprehensive guidelines for PFAS as new toxicity assessments are published. While current limits are guidelines rather than regulations, the extremely low recommended levels (0.02 parts-per-trillion) suggest that future regulations could be stringent. As PFAS research evolves, sampling and detection methods will likely become more refined, necessitating ongoing environmental media updates to best practices. ​

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Accurate sampling requires specific materials that do not add PFAS to samples or absorb it from them. Teledyne ISCO has produced a kit to make sampling easy. Materials in each item of the kit have been selected based on United States guidelines to avoid adding or absorbing PFAS.

The kit includes Category 1 items that come directly in contact with samples, such as strainer, suction line, pump tube, bottles to prepare blanks, and sampler collector. The kit also includes some of Category 2 items that do not come in contact with the sample, but are used in the sampling process.​

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