Jianan Song‡
a,
Zhenglian Liu‡b,
Ziwei Lia and
Hui Wu*a
aState Key Laboratory of New Ceramics and Fine Processing, School of Materials Science and Engineering, Tsinghua University, Beijing 100084, China. E-mail: huiwu@mail.tsinghua.edu.cn
bSchool of Materials Science and Technology, China University of Geosciences, Beijing 100083, China
First published on 22nd May 2020
Nanofibers are gradually being widely used in air filtration due to their unique characteristics. However, the mass production of nanofiber filter material faces several problems. Blow spinning is an emerging technology, which have great potential for mass production of nanofibers. In this work, we have successfully realized the continuous production of 500 mm wide nanofiber membranes by blow spinning, which enables continuous preparation of multi-level nanofiber filter materials: PAN60 (filtration efficiency is 63.2%, pressure drop is 18 Pa), PAN80 (filtration efficiency is 80.7%, pressure drop is 38 Pa), PAN90 (filtration efficiency is 92.9%, pressure drop is 58 Pa) and PAN99 (filtration efficiency is 99.5%, pressure drop is 123 Pa). In order to improve the stability performance of melt-blown filters, we provide a strategy that combines nanofibers with a melt-blown filter. PAN nanofibers were sprayed directly on the melt-blown filter by blow spinning. The composite filters have more stable filtration performance and higher efficiency when intercepting particles with a diameter below 100 nm than melt-blown filters.
In order to reduce the harm of PM2.5 to people, masks, air purifiers and fresh air systems have been widely used. Filter materials are crucial in these products. At present, three types of filter materials are adopted, namely porous membrane, non-woven fiber filter material and nano-fiber filter material. The core performances of filter media are filtration effect and air resistance, but these two performances are mutually restrictive. Porous membrane filter material refers to many small pores on the membrane matrix, such as ePTFE membrane.9–11 This kind of material has low air flux due to its low porosity, and generally has a very high filtration effect, but the air resistance of which is very large. Non-woven fiber filter material is widely used at present, such as PP melt-blown filter. This kind of material has high porosity and high air flux, but low filtration efficiency.12,13 In order to achieve high efficiency and low resistance, it is necessary to improve the filtration efficiency with help of static electricity technology.14–17 However, due to the easily dissipated charge, the filtration efficiency of this filters decrease rapidly in actual use. Nano-fiber filter material is a new kind of filter material with the development of nanotechnology in recent years. Because such materials have small fiber diameters, they can produce nano-scale pores with high specific surface area and high van der Waals forces.18–28 Chong et al. found that the polar chemical groups on PAN nanofibers have a great combination with PM2.5.18 Carbon nanotube filter material developed by Li et al. showed good filtration performance.19 Many techniques were used to make nanofiber filter materials. Such as electrospinning, melt spinning, CVD, and the like. However, each technology has its limitations. Electrospinning is widely considered as the most promising industrialization manufacturing technology of nanofiber, whose advantages have been proved through a large number of studies. By contrast, several problems gradually reveal in industrial road due to the high cost of the technology, low yield, and the conductive requirements of the substrate, which make electrospinning unable to adapt to the overall filter market demand, and greatly limited in application.28 In the past, our group provide a new strategy, blow spinning, that can quickly and efficiently prepare nanofibers without the need of a high-voltage electric field.29–32 Our group independently developed a hand-held spinning device that can directly spray nanofibers on screens to effectively intercept PM2.5.29 The small output of handheld spinning equipment is only suitable for home use, and cannot meet large demand for filter. Hand-held spinning device nanofiber screen technology is only suitable for home applications. Industrial continuous production technology based on blow spinning technology is critical for large-scale application of nanofibers in air filtration. However, scale-up of blow spinning of nanofiber air filters to the industrial level has not been demonstrated so far.
The present work has successfully developed continuous production system of a long-width (500 mm) nanofiber membrane, which can continuously produce multi-level PAN nanofiber filter. At the same time, it can be combined with any substrate based on blow spinning. The specificity of the composite has successfully developed a PAN nanofiber filter compound with a meltblown electrostatic filter material, which can achieve an initial PM2.5 efficiency of 95%, and maintain a filtration efficiency of 84.3% during the 20 day test period. According to test analysis, we found that it has obvious advantages when intercepting particle blow 100 nm than melt-blown filter.
The biggest value of our work is to successfully realize the continuous production of 500 mm wide nanofiber membrane by blow spinning. The schematic of the setup used in the continuous production is shown in Fig. 1a. Polymer solution was suppled into the spinneret with corresponding speed. The high-speed air was delivered to spinneret by air compressor. The spinneret consisted of an array of concentric nozzles, whose internal diameter is 0.15 mm. Fig. 1b shows the spinneret is running. It can be observed that multiple liquid jet from the tip of needles. As the solvent evaporates, the fibers eventually form. Fig. S1† demonstrate the actual production system. The rotating mesh is use to collect nanofibers. The nanofiber membranes formed on the mesh by suction, which were collected directly into rolls. Based on our previous research result, we choose PAN polymer as the raw material of nanofiber.29 Fig. 1c shows a 500 mm wide PAN nanofiber membrane that produced by our setup under optimal process parameters, showing very good uniformity and self-support. The thickness of the membrane can be controlled by changing the different web speeds. Fig. S2† shows nanofiber membrane having thicknesses of 5 ± 0.7 μm, 11 ± 1.1 μm, 36 ± 3.4 μm and 110 ± 5.4 μm, respectively. There are not any holes in nanofibers membrane, indicating the manufacturing process is stable and uninterrupted. In addition to the preparation of self-support nanofiber membranes, our technology was proved be easily implemented by directly spraying fibers on any substrate. The Fig. 1d shows the fiber spray on metal mesh. We write the word to show the difference between the front and back of the spray fiber. The left picture shows the metal mesh before the fiber spray. The nanofiber words on the right is blurred, showing the nanofiber bond with metal mesh. Nanofibers can also be spray on spunbond fabrics (Fig. 1e), and 80 mesh polyester gauze (Fig. S6†). Various thicknesses of nanofibers can be adopted to deposited on each substrate on needs (Fig. S7†). After being sprayed with nanofibers, the composite filter material can be continuously collected into rolls. Fig. 1f demonstrate various rolls of nanofiber composite materials.
Scan electron microscopy (SEM) was used to observe the morphology of the nanofibers. Fig. 2a shows that the nanofibers have no defects and the fiber surface is very smooth. Under a larger field of view (Fig. 2b), the fibers are interwoven and distributing evenly. The map of fiber diameter (Fig. 2c) indicate that, the average diameter of the fiber is 330 nm, and the fiber diameter is mostly in the range of 250–300 nm, accounting for 30% of the whole. The average pore size of the nanofiber scaffolds is 3.79 μm (Fig. S5†). SEM image (Fig. 2d) shows that the nanofibers are uniformly deposited on the metal mesh without any huge pores. Fig. 2e shows the microscopic morphology of the composite of nanofibers and spunbond fabrics. The surface of spunbond fabrics is rough, which do not influence the uniform distribution of fibers. In fact, the process affects the morphology of the fibers. As Table S1† shows three process parameters. Number 1 is the optimal process we use. However, when the air pressure is increased, a lot of droplets are present on fiber (Fig. S3†). We speculate that the droplets are mainly caused by the turbulence of the air flow increasing with the increase of air pressure. When the flow rate increases, the fiber bundle was observed in SEM image (Fig. S4†). The generation of fiber bundles is mainly because the solvent is less volatile as the flow rate increases, and the interference between adjacent needles is intensified, which makes uneven distribution of fiber.
There are different requirements for filtration efficiency and pressure drop in various situation of PM2.5 filtration. On previous studies by our group, PAN nanofiber filter has shown good performance on intercepting particle due to their high polarity. In order to adapt to large-scale production of PAN nanofiber filters, we abandoned the DMF solvent due to huge health risks, and we use green DMSO as the solvent. We choose standard MPPS particle filtration test to evaluate the performance of filter. Fig. 3a shows the test results of different level of filters: PAN60 (filtration efficiency is 63.2%, pressure drop is 18 Pa), PAN80 (filtration efficiency is 80.7%, pressure drop is 38 Pa), PAN90 (filtration efficiency is 92.9%, pressure drop is 58 Pa) PAN99 (filtration efficiency is 99.5%, pressure drop is 123 Pa). In mechanical tensile test, PAN nanofiber filter was broken after being elongated to 13.3%, and the maximum stress was 2.3 MPa. The inset image shows the state in which the fiber membrane is stretched to the maximum elongation. The filtration stability of the filter material is a very important evaluation index of filtration performance but easy to be ignored in actual use. The traditional melt-blow filter material usually adopts to charge in order to achieve high filtration efficiency. However, the dissipation of static electricity will seriously affect the performance of the filter. Fig. 3c shows that the filtration efficiency of the melt-blown electrostatic filter material gradually decreases with the storage time in the environment of 25 °C. The filtration efficiency decreases from the initial 84.3% to 65.4% on the 6th day, which is decreased by 18.9%, and the sample data is highly variable. PAN nanofiber filter material remained stable in filtration efficiency during the 20 day storage period. This is mainly because PAN nanofibers interfere with PM2.5 by relying on PAN polarity attraction and nanofiber physical interception. These two mechanisms are not interfered by environmental factors, resulting in long-term guarantees. Fig. 3d shows that at 60 °C at a higher temperature, the melt-blown filter material continued to decrease over time, and after 20 days the filtration efficiency decreased to 57.9%, a decrease of 25.2%. By contrast, PAN nanofibers remain stable and show better environmental adaptability than melt blown filters.
The melt-blown filter material has lower pressure drop among other kinds of filter, which are usually used in civil field such as mask and air purifier. In fact, when the filter fails in actual situation, users will be exposed to PM2.5 without knowing it and face health risks. However, melt-blown filter cannot intercept PM2.5 without charge due to huge size pore of fiber scaffolds. Therefore, we provide a strategy that combine nanofibers with melt-blown filter. PAN nanofibers were sprayed directly on the melt-blown filter by blow spinning. The composite filter can balance stability and low pressure drop. Fig. 4a shows that the initial filtration efficiency of the melt-blown filter material is 83.42%, the initial pressure drop is 21.7 Pa. After PAN nanofibers coating, it was found that the filtration efficiency of the composite filter reached 95.54%, and the pressure drop increased slightly to 29.1 Pa. For testing the efficiency of full-size particle scanning analysis, the PM particles used neutralized monodisperse solid NaCl nanoparticles, which have a diameter from 30 to 600 nm. As shown in Fig. 4b, it is found that the filtration efficiency of the particulate matter under the all the NaCl particle (30–600 nm) is improved. In particular, there is huge improvement on the filtration efficiency of composite filter for particles below 100 nm. The combination of nanofibers and melt-blown filter, which is also the key to actual use has been evaluated. After adding average 47 g weight, nanofiber finally fall off with melt-blown, an average bond stress of 80.3 N m−2 (Fig. 4c). From the SEM image of the cross section, PAN nanofiber layer was tightly packed on the melt-blown filter material. It is presumed that the solvent did not completely evaporate after the fiber fell on the substrate. After the solvent was finally evaporated, the nanofibers could effectively adhere to the surface of substrate. As shown in Fig. 4d and e, the environmental resistance of the composite filter is as expected to increase. When testing at 25 °C, the initial efficiency is 94.25%. After 20 days, the final efficiency is 85.03%. There is only a 9.2% decrease in filtration efficiency compared to the initial efficiency. When testing at 60 °C, the initial efficiency is 95.13% and the final efficiency is 79.49% after 20 days. These results indicate that composite filters have more stable filtration performance.
In summary, we successfully realized the continuous production of 500 mm wide nanofiber membrane by blow spinning. This technology can continuous fabrication nanofiber coating on each substrate. Base on this technology, we fabricated multi-level PAN nanofiber filter, namely, PAN60 (filtration efficiency: 63.2%, pressure drop: 18 Pa), PAN80 (filtration efficiency: 80.7%, pressure drop 38 Pa), PAN90 (filtration efficiency: 92.9%, pressure drop: 58 Pa) PAN99 (filtration efficiency: 99.5%, pressure drop: 123 Pa), which have good stability of filtration performance in different situation. In order to improve the stability performance of melt-blown filter, we provide a strategy that combine nanofibers with melt-blown filter. PAN nanofibers were sprayed directly on the melt-blown filter by blow spinning. The composite filter have more stable filtration performance and higher efficiency when intercepting particle blow 100 nm than melt-blown filter. We believe that the continuous production technology of nanofiber by blow spinning offers a new option to protect our environment and personal health more effectively.
Footnotes |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/d0ra01656j |
‡ These authors contributed equally to this work. |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2020 |