| Literature DB >> 32455530 |
Mesbah Najafi1, Margaret W Frey1.
Abstract
The separation and purification of specific chemicals from a mixture have become necessities for many envEntities:
Keywords: adsorption; electrospinning; membrane; nanofiber; polymer; separation
Year: 2020 PMID: 32455530 PMCID: PMC7279547 DOI: 10.3390/nano10050982
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanomaterials (Basel) ISSN: 2079-4991 Impact factor: 5.076
Figure 1Scheme of the electrospinning process (Reproduced with permission from [10]. Copyright Wiley, 2004).
Figure 2SEM images of electrospun polystyrene (PS) nanofibers produced at two molecular weights of (a) Mw = 34 KD and (b) Mw = 208 KD [13], morphology of PS nanofibers (Mw = 208 KD) formed from tetrahydrofuran (THF) and dimethylformamide (DMF) solvents: (c) THF/DMF (100/0) (d) THF/DMF (40/60), PS (M = 208 KD) fibers nanofibers electrospun from (e) 10% and (f) 30% PS in THF:DMF (80/20 w/w) [13] (Reproduced with permission from [13]. Copyright Elsevier, 2012).
Figure 3Graft reactions between silk and PMDA for lysozyme adsorption (adapted from [22] with the permission of American Chemical Society).
Figure 4(a) SEM images of PAN electrospun nanofibers, (b) cellulose nanowhisker-modified PAN electrospun nanofibers and (c) adsorption of crystal violet dye by the cellulose nanowhisker-modified PAN nanofibers (Reproduced with permission from [26]. Copyright American Chemical Society, 2012).
Figure 5PVA-PMA nanofiber membranes for proteins separation; at pH 6, the charge of LYZ (IP of 10.8) is positive, while the charges of the BSA (IP = 4.8) and PVA/PMA nanofibers are both negative. Thus, the nanofibers repel the BSA and capture the LYZ, resulting in a selective protein adsorption from a mixture.
Figure 6(Left) Electrostatic adsorption between MOF 808 and heavy metals at the surface and pore space caused by a change in pH. (a) MOF 808, (b) deprotonated MOF 808, and (c) heavy metal ion bound MOF. M2+ refers to heavy metal ions; black dots represent adsorbed M2+. Color code: Zr = grey, C = ash, O = red, H = white. (Right) SEM images of the nanofibrous membranes with 20 wt% MOF loading: PA 300 and PA 808 (Reproduced with permission from [38]. Copyright The Royal Society of Chemistry, 2018).
Figure 7Schematic representation of the covalent attachment of albumin protein on electrospun nanofibers through EDC/NHS activation. EDC/NHS enables proteins to be easily conjugated to a substrate with carboxyl or amino groups (Reproduced with permission from [45]. Copyright Express Polymer Letters, 2016.
Figure 8(A) Fabrication of a cross-linked poly-CD network structure from HPβCD and BTCA. (B) Electrospinning of the CD solutions containing BTCA and an initiator. (C) Digital photos of the self-standing and insoluble properties of the poly-CD nanofibrous membranes. The SEM images show poly-CD nanofibers before and after immersing in water for 24 h (scale bar: 10 μm) (Reproduced with permission from [64]. Copyright Springer Nature, 2017.).
Figure 9Scheme of the surface modification of electrospun PSU nanofibers with CB.
Figure 10Chemical structure of biotin (left) and scheme of antibody/antigen immobilization on the fiber surface with the biotin/streptavidin capture mechanism (right). One active site of avidin is occupied by the biotin and the three vacant sites remain for further binding with biotinylated rabbit anti-goat IgG. The antigen–FITC is finally attached to the nanofiber surface by antibody–antigen interactions.
Figure 11Molecular structures of PLA-b-PEG and PLA-b-PEG-Biotin copolymers (a), illustration of PLA/PLA-b-PEG/Biotin nanofibers for the removal of avidin from a 4′-hydroxyazobenzene-2-carboxylic acid (HABA)/Avidin solution (b). Initially, avidin and HABA form a complex with an orange color. When nanofibers containing biotin are added to the solution, avidin binds biotin, breaking the HABA/avidin complex and leading to a color change. (Reproduced with permission from [74]. Copyright American Chemical Society, 2017).
Figure 12Scheme of the in situ polymerization method for the synthesis process of A-Fe@CNFs (a), image of the nanofibers after adsorption of MB (10 min) and RhB (15 min) (b) (Reproduced with permission from [78]. Copyright The Royal Society of Chemistry, 2012).
Figure 13Scheme of FeCO2 crystals supported on nitrogen-doped porous carbon fibers (Reproduced with permission from [81]. Copyright The Royal Society of Chemistry, 2017).
Summary of electrospun nanofibrous membranes for chemical separation.
| Capture Mechanism | Nanofiber Materials | Adsorption Capacity | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ion exchange | WK/SF | 2.88 μg/mg (Cu(II)) | [ |
| Chitosan | 600 (Cu(II))) and 400 (Ag(I)) mg/g | [ | |
| PVA/MAH | 177 mg/g (LYZ) | [ | |
| EVOH–CCA | 284 mg/g (LYZ) | [ | |
| PDA/PEI@PVA/PEI | 1180 (Ponceau S), 1290 mg/g (MB) | [ | |
| Silk-PMDA | 710 mg/g (LYZ) | [ | |
| PAN/PET–Cellulose Nanowhiskers | 68 mg/g (CV) | [ | |
| SiO2@CNF | 30 mg/g (BSA) | [ | |
| PVA/PMA | 476.53 mg/g (LYZ) | [ | |
| PS/PEI | 1000 (Sunset Yellow FCF), 357.14 mg/g (Cd(II)) | [ | |
| PAN–COOH | 105 mg/g (LYZ) | [ | |
| CNF–COOH | 200 mg/g (LYZ) | [ | |
| PAN–LYS | 425.49 mg/g (pepsin) and 54.98 mg/g (LYZ) | [ | |
| (Zr6O4(OH)4(COOH)6(BTC)2 | 276.96 mg/g (Hg) | [ | |
| Fe3O4–(H2O)2(BTC)2· | 299.66 mg/g (Hg) | [ | |
| Covalent attachment | Silk fibroin | 56.6 μg/mg (CT for 205 nm fiber diameter) | [ |
| Collagen-modified PANCAA | 9.15 mg/g (Lipase) | [ | |
| PSF | 0.8 mg/g (Lipase) | [ | |
| chelation | Chitosan | 485.44 (Cu(II)) and and 263.15 mg/g (Pb(II)) | [ |
| PAA/PVA | 0.142 mmol/g ((Cu(II)) | [ | |
| PVA cross-linked PEI | 70.92 (Cu(II)), 121.95 (Cd(II)) and 94.34 mg/g (Pb(II)) | [ | |
| PVA/SiO2–SH | 489.12 mg/g (Cu(II)) | [ | |
| (NaOH Hydrolyzed PAN) H-ePAN | 31.3 mg/g (Cu(II)) | [ | |
| PAN-oxime | 52.70 (Cu(II)) and 263.45 mg/g (Pb (II)) | [ | |
| Hydrazine-modified PAN | 114 (Cu(II)) and 217 mg/g (Pb (II)) | [ | |
| Poly-cyclodextrin | 124.1 mg/g | [ | |
| affinity | Cellulose-attached CB | 4 (bilirubin) and 13 mg/g (BSA) | [ |
| Chitosan/nylon-6-attached CB | 70 mg/g (Papain) | [ | |
| Chitosan-attached CB | 161.6 mg/g (Bromelain) | [ | |
| (PLA-b-PEG)/Biotin | 107.2 mg/g (avidin) | [ | |
| PES-attached protein A/G | 4.5 mg/mL (IgG) | [ | |
| PVA-Co-PE-attached protein A/G | 61.4 mg/g (IgG) | [ | |
| Magnetic adsorption | A-Fe@CNFs | Complete adsorption of MB and RhB dyes | [ |
| PAN/PBZ | Complete removal of bisphenol-S, chlorophenol, and phenol | [ |