| Literature DB >> 29555991 |
Xiaowei Zhang1,2, Wei Zhang3, Mingqiang Yi4, Yingjie Wang1, Pengjun Wang5, Jun Xu6, Fenglei Niu7, Feng Lin8.
Abstract
Airborne particulate matter (PM) is causing more and more serious air pollution and threatening the public health. However, existing air filter technologies with the easy-to-block manner can rarely meet the requirements of high-performance PM filters. Here we propose a conceptually new type of inertial impaction filters for rapidly high-efficiency PM removal. Under the airflow velocity of 8.0 m/s, the real inertial impaction filters show high PM removal efficiencies of up to 97.77 ± 1.53% and 99.47 ± 0.45% for PM2.5 and PM10, respectively. Compared with the traditional air filters reported previously, the inertia impaction filters exhibit extremely low pressure drop of 5-10 Pa and high quality factor (QF) values of 0.380 Pa-1 and 0.524 Pa-1 for PM2.5 and PM10, respectively. These greatly improved QF values are achieved through a series of inertial separation processes. The feature dimension of filtration channel is dozens of times larger than PM average size, which greatly decreases airflow resistance. Particularly, this inertial structure can be made of various types of materials, which shows great potential for low-cost fabrication of large-area devices. As a stand-alone device or incorporated with the existing PM air filter, this inertial impaction filter will bring great benefits to the public health.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29555991 PMCID: PMC5859014 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-23257-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(a) Photographs of a random location in China during (I) a moderate day and (II) an extremely PM2.5-related hazardous day, respectively. (b) Conceptual sketches of two types of existing commercial air filters in common use: (I) a fibrous air filter with static electricity and (II) a membrane air filter with tiny pores. (c) Conceptual illustrations of the basic building block of an inertial impaction filter. Inset is the cross-sectional structure of an inertial impaction filter unit.
Figure 2Particles’ trajectories (red dashed lines) and airflow streamlines (black solid lines) calculated by use of the Stokes flow field when the size of particles is 1.0 μm (a) and 0.95 μm (b), respectively.
Figure 3Trajectories of the PM particles with different sizes under the inlet velocity of 1.0 m/s.
Figure 4Removal efficiency of PM2.5 (a) and PM10 (b), pressure drop (c), and quality factor (d) of the inertial impaction filters under different airflow velocities. Error bar represents the standard deviation of three replicate measurements.
A summary of performances of different materials and designs for PM filtration in recent literatures in comparison to what is achieved in this work.
| Materials | Δ | Test particles | Additional advantages | Ref. | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PAN nanofiber | 0.024 | 133 Pa for 3 m/s | 96.12 | PM2.5 | ~85% transparency |
[ |
| PI nanofiber | 0.1072 | 73 Pa for 0.2 m/s | 99.97 | PM2.5 | ~370 °C thermal stability |
[ |
| PAN nanofiber | 0.1014 | 80 Pa for 0.2 m/s | 99.97 | PM2.5 | ~230 °C thermal stability |
[ |
| Nylon-6 nanofiber | 0.062 | 42 Pa for 0.2 m/s | 92.73 | PM2.5 | ~10 times faster production speed |
[ |
| PAN nanofiber | 0.052 | 124 Pa for 0.6~0.8 m/s | 99.86 | PM2.5 | Large-scale direct coating |
[ |
| R-TENGd enhanced PI nanofiber | — | 17 Pa for 1 m/s 180 Pa for 5 m/s | 97 | PM | — |
[ |
| Nanofibrous MOFe | — | 20 Pa for 50 mL/min | 88.33 89.67 | PM2.5 PM10 | — |
[ |
| PVDFf nanofibers with NIPSg | 0.042 | 95 Pa for 0.0166 m/s | 98.33 | PM2.5 | Releasing negative ions |
[ |
| PVDF/PAN | 0.0954 | 45 Pa for 14 L/min | 98.34 | PM2.5 | Rapidly transferring moisture |
[ |
| Commercial-1 | 0.00062 | 299 Pa | 16.93 | PM2.5 | — |
[ |
| Commercial-2 | 0.0068 | 809 Pa | 99.58 | PM2.5 | — |
[ |
| This work | 0.380 0.524 | 10 Pa for 8.0 m/s | 97.77 99.47 | PM2.5 PM10 | Extremely low airflow resistance and pressure drop |
aQF stands for the quality factor, QF = −ln(1 − E%)/Δp.
bΔp stands for the pressure drop.
cE stands for the PM removal efficiency.
dR-TENG stands for the rotating triboelectric nano generator.
eMOF stands for the metal organic framework.
fPVDF stands for the polyvinylidene fluoride.
gNIPs stands for the negative ions powders.