Experience

“Occurrence and Migration of PFAS Firefighting Foam in Surface Water and Groundwater”

This webinar presents some of the fundamentals of groundwater and surface water contamination due to firefighting foams that are composed of Aqueous Film Forming Foam (AFFF), which contain Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS). PFAS are a group of man-made chemicals that include PFOA and PFOS, and which have been referred to as “Forever Chemicals” because of their persistence in the environment. This webinar includes narrated, educational animations and an audience question and answer period. Presented to GeoEnviroPro Educational Series, February 17, 2021.

Key topics covered include:

  • AFFF Usage & Contamination Sources – How firefighting foam is used in nozzle spray tests, fire training exercises, emergency fuel spill responses, and aircraft hangar suppression systems.
  • Chemical Properties of PFAS – Explaining why PFOS, PFOA, and other PFAS compounds are highly resistant to degradation, heat, and water solubility, making them persistent in groundwater.
  • Groundwater Contamination & Plume Migration – How AFFF infiltrates soil, dissolves into groundwater, and forms contaminant plumes, which migrate toward surface water bodies and drinking water sources.
  • Ecological & Human Health Concerns – Discussion of bioaccumulation in muscle tissue, surface water impacts, and the presence of PFAS-contaminated fish, leading to public health advisories.
  • Multiple Contaminant Plumes – Mapping overlapping PFAS sources from various release points, such as fire training areas, accidents, and suppression systems, leading to complex contamination patterns.
  • Case Study of a Major Air Force Base – Examining a well-documented PFAS contamination site in Michigan, where multiple plumes have migrated thousands of feet and significantly exceed regulatory limits.
  • Foam in Surface Water & Natural Foam Distinction – Differentiating between PFAS contamination and naturally occurring surface water foam to avoid misinterpretation of environmental observations.