| Literature DB >> 30960884 |
Yi Pu1, Jie Zheng2, Fuxing Chen3, Yunze Long4, Han Wu5, Qiusheng Li6, Shuxin Yu7, Xiaoxiong Wang8, Xin Ning9.
Abstract
In this paper, a novel electrostatic-assisted melt blown process was reported to produce polypropylene (PP) microfibers with a diameter as fine as 600 nm. The morphology, web structure, pore size distribution, filtration efficiency, and the stress and strain behavior of the PP nonwoven fabric thus prepared were characterized. By introducing an electrostatic field into the conventional melt-blown apparatus, the average diameter of the melt-blown fibers was reduced from 1.69 to 0.96 μm with the experimental setup, and the distribution of fiber diameters was narrower, which resulted in a filter medium with smaller average pore size and improved filtration efficiency. The polymer microfibers prepared by this electrostatic-assisted melt blown method may be adapted in a continuous melt blown process for the production of filtration media used in air filters, dust masks, and so on.Entities:
Keywords: electrostatic-assisted melt blown; filtration efficiency; microfibers
Year: 2018 PMID: 30960884 PMCID: PMC6403903 DOI: 10.3390/polym10090959
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Polymers (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4360 Impact factor: 4.329
Figure 1The schematic illustration of the electrostatic-assisted melt-blown system setup (a) and the details around the spinning head (b,c).
Figure 2SEM graphs of the polypropylene (PP) microfiber prepared under different voltages or electric field distances by electrostatic-assisted melt blown. (a) to (e) show PP microfiber prepared in voltage of 0 kV (a), 10 kV (b), 20 kV (c), 30 kV (d) and 40 kV (e); (e) to (g) show PP microfiber prepared in electric field distance of 20 cm (e), 15 cm (f) and 10 cm (g).
Figure 3Fiber diameter of fabric prepared under different voltages (a), collecting distances (b), and electric field strength’s influence on average diameter (c). The error bars in (a,b) represent the standard deviation of fiber diameter for each group of samples.
Figure 4Fiber diameter distributions of PP nonwoven fabric prepared by conventional melt blowing (a) and electrostatic-assisted melt blown (b). Insets are the diameter distributions of each group in the 0–3 μm range.
Figure 5Stress-strain curve of electrostatic-assisted melt-blown fabric and conventional melt-blown fabric.
Figure 6Pore size distribution and air permeability of conventional melt-blown fabric (a) and electrostatic-assisted melt-blown fabric (b).
Figure 7Filtration efficiency of melt-blown fabric and electrostatic-assisted melt-blown fabric.
Filtration efficiencies of different particle sizes.
| Particle Size | 0.3 μm | 1 μm | 2.5 μm |
|---|---|---|---|
| Melt-blown | 40.651% | 73.986% | 95.353% |
| Electrostatic-assisted Melt-blown | 50.826% | 86.442% | 98.969% |