|
|
|
|
|
by jkic47
650 days ago
|
|
The manufacturers would not disclose it to us beyond it was "not-PFOA", but they did agree to disclose it to the FDA upon request. The application requires a small, inert molecule, which PFOA was, in spades. They simply made a slightly different small molecule that was almost as inert. Small is a problem because it becomes mobile. Inert is a problem because it doesn't easily break down. Now, instead of having one "forever chemical" we have a host of them in the environment. Not sure what the right answer is and whether we are actually better off as a result of all that work. |
|
Also: weird (suspect?) that they didn't disclose the exact identity. I guess if you have the equipment it takes about an hour to run a gc/ms, are they just hoping to not scare people by saying upfront "it's another polyfluorinated thing"?