| Literature DB >> 35125661 |
Tan Tan Bui1, Min Kyoung Shin2, Seung Yong Jee3, Dang Xuan Long2,4, Jongin Hong2,4, Myung-Gil Kim1.
Abstract
The significant public health concerns related to particulate matter (PM) air pollutants and the airborne transmission of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) have led to considerable interest in high-performance air filtration membranes. Highly ferroelectric polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF) nanofiber (NF) filter membranes are successfully fabricated via electrospinning for high-performance low-cost air filtration. Spectroscopic and ferro-/piezoelectric analyses of PVDF NF show that a thinner PVDF NF typically forms a ferroelectric β phase with a confinement effect. A 70-nm PVDF NF membrane exhibits the highest fraction of β phase (87%) and the largest polarization behavior from piezoresponse force microscopy. An ultrathin 70-nm PVDF NF membrane exhibits a high PM0.3 filtration efficiency of 97.40% with a low pressure drop of 51 Pa at an air flow of 5.3 cm/s owing to the synergetic combination of the slip effect and ferroelectric dipole interaction. Additionally, the 70-nm PVDF NF membrane shows excellent thermal and chemical stabilities with negligible filtration performance degradation (air filtration efficiency of 95.99% and 87.90% and pressure drop of 55 and 65 Pa, respectively) after 24 h of heating at 120 °C and 1 h immersion in isopropanol.Entities:
Keywords: Air filtration; COVID-19; Electrospun PVDF; Ferroelectric nanofiber; Nanofibrous membrane
Year: 2022 PMID: 35125661 PMCID: PMC8800002 DOI: 10.1016/j.colsurfa.2022.128418
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Colloids Surf A Physicochem Eng Asp ISSN: 0927-7757 Impact factor: 4.539
Scheme 1Schematic illustration of PVDF NF air filter. (a) Representative curve of the MPPS (0.3 µm). (b) Emergence of the slip effect with fiber diameter variation. (c) Impact of ferroelectricity on capturing PM. (d) Phase transformation of PVDF and its effect on air filtration with different filter diameters.
Fig. 1Surface morphology of nanofibrous membrane at various diameters. (a) Electrospinning processing configuration of the PVDF polymer and SDS additive. FE-SEM images of (b) electrospun pristine PVDF sample and (c) 0.5 wt% SDS-containing sample. (d) Average PVDF nanofiber diameter variation with SDS concentration change.
Fig. 2Phase identification of PVDF nanofiber. (a) FT-IR spectra and (b) XRD patterns of PVDF at various forms and diameters.
β phase fraction and the ratio of β phase versus α phase at various PVDF forms.
| Sample | β fraction (%) | Aβ/Aα |
|---|---|---|
| PVDF powder | 39.42 | – |
| Solution cast PVDF | 54.62 | 0.44 |
| 250-nm PVDF NF | 70.15 | 0.90 |
| 120-nm PVDF NF | 83.70 | 1.42 |
| 70-nm PVDF NF | 87.0 | 1.61 |
Fig. 3Piezoresponse force microscopy measurement of PVDF NF. Topography images of PVDF NFs with a diameter of (a) 70 nm, (b) 120 nm and (c) 200 nm. (d) PFM measurement illustration. (e) Amplitude loop and (f) phase loop of PVDF NFs with diameter of 70 nm, 120 nm, and 200 nm.
Fig. 4Air filtration efficiency performance of nanofibrous filters. (a) The air filtration efficiency and pressure drop of representative 250-nm PVDF NF, 120-nm PVDF NF and 70-nm PVDF NF filters. (b) The QF and air filtration efficiency of 70-nm PVDF NF based air filter membrane. (c) The QF and air filtration efficiency of representative 250-nm, 120-nm, and 70-nm PVDF NF filters with a pressure drop of 30–31 Pa.
Fig. 5Chemical and thermal stability of a PVDF nanofibrous membrane. (a) Filtration efficiency comparison of PVDF nanofibrous membrane and PP MB membrane after IPA treatment. (b) FTIR and (c) XRD of PVDF nanofiber immersed in IPA for various time periods. (d) Filtration performance of PVDF nanofibrous membrane after high temperature treatment. (e) FTIR and (f) XRD of PVDF nanofiber heated at various temperatures for 24 h.