6 Emerging Nanofibrous Air Filters For PM Removal: 6.1 Particulate Matter
6 Emerging Nanofibrous Air Filters For PM Removal: 6.1 Particulate Matter
6 Emerging Nanofibrous Air Filters For PM Removal: 6.1 Particulate Matter
(a) (b)
Figure 6.1 (a) Photograph of Beijing on a sunny day. (b) Photograph of Beijing on a hazy day
with hazardous PM2.5 level. Source: Liu et al. 2015 [18]. Reprinted with permission of Springer
Nature.
Airflow Airflow
Small opening
size exclusion
Thick
Micron size
Porous membrane air filter Commercial fibrous air filter
(a) (b)
Figure 6.2 (a) Schematic illustration of porous air filter capturing PM particles by size
exclusion. (b) Schematic illustration of bulky fibrous air filter capturing PM particles by thick
physical barrier and adhesion. Source: Liu et al. 2015 [18]. Reprinted with permission of
Springer Nature.
higher air permeability with more than 70% porosity, but their PM2.5 removal
performance is still not satisfactory due to the microsized diameter of the indi-
vidual fibers, ranging from several microns to tens of microns [18, 26, 28–30].
Therefore, large fiber diameter, uncontrollable porosity, and packing density of
fibrous air filter cause the several deficiencies, including the bulkiness, material
consumption, nontransparency, and the trade-off between airflow and filter effi-
ciency (Figure 6.2b) [18, 27].
High airflow
High transparency
Figure 6.3 Schematic illustration of nanofibrous membrane air filter with high transparency
and low resistance to airflow that captures PM particles by strong surface adhesion. Source:
Chang et al. 2018 [31]. Reprinted with permission of Royal Society of Chemistry.
Merge to
existing PM
her
get
Attach to rge to
nanofiber me
PM
(a) (b) (e)
(f)
(c) (d)
Figure 6.4 (a–d) Schematics showing the mechanism of PM capture by the nanofibrous filter
at different time sequences. (e) SEM image showing the morphologies of attached PM that
formed a coating layer wrapping around the nanofibers (scale bar: 1 μm). (f ) SEM image
showing that the nanofiber junction has more PM aggregated to form bigger particles (scale
bar: 1 μm). Source: Liu et al. 2015 [18]. Reprinted with permission of Springer Nature.
[52], polyethylene oxide (PEO) [53], PC [54, 55], silk [56], Nylon-6 [40], Nylon-66
[57], PMMA [47], and protein [58, 59], as well as composite materials, involving
PVDF doped with negative ions powder [36], PVDF/polytetrafluoroethylene
(PTFE) [60], PVC/PU [61], PAN/fluorinated PU [62], PAN/silica [63], Nylon-6/
PAN [27], Nylon-6/boehmite [64], PVA/PAN [65], PAN/ionic liquid [66], polysul-
fone/titania (TiO2 ) [67], PAN/polysulfone [68], PVA/TiO2 [69], PVDF/Ag/Al2 O3
[70], PMMA/cyclodextrin [71], PS/cyclodextrin [72], PC/benzyl triethylammo-
nium chloride [73], PLA/TiO2 [74], PAN/MOF [23], etc.
Up to now, a range of techniques such as template synthesis, electrospin-
ning, chemical vapor deposition (CVD), drawing, self-assembly, solvothermal
synthesis, phase separation, etc. have been explored to fabricate nanofibrous
membranes [18, 75–81].
Among these techniques, electrospinning is regarded as a simple and versatile
approach for fabrication of uniform nanofibers with diameters from micrometers
to nanometers using diverse polymer solutions [34, 82–85]. In the electrospin-
ning process, strong electrostatic force produced by a high voltage overcomes
the surface tension of the polymer solution or melt, and its fluid jet deformed
into a conical shape (Taylor cone) is ejected to the counter electrode, becoming
polymer fibers after evaporating [86–90]. Electrospun nanofibrous membranes
possess attractive properties that make them desirable in air filter area [86, 88, 89].
Recently, various new technologies have been introduced for continuous fabri-
cation of large-area filters, such as roll-to-roll blow-spinning technique [47] and
roll-to-roll hot-pressing methods [91].
6.4 Applications
This rest of this chapter reviews major milestones in this budding field of
nanofibrous air filters for PM2.5 removal. We highlight the significant recent
advances of nanofibrous membrane air filters with integrated multifunctions,
202 6 Emerging Nanofibrous Air Filters for PM2.5 Removal
N
N O OH
n n n n n
V (3.6 D) (2.3 D) (0.7 D) (1.2 D) (0.6 D)
(a) (b) PAN PVP PS PVA PP
(c)
(d)
PM2.5 PM10–2.5
1.0
Removal efficiency
0.8
0.6
0.4
0.2
0.0
(f)
N
P
PS
C VA
C on
r
PP
pe
PV
PA
b
P
op
ar
(e)
Figure 6.5 (a) Schematic illustration of the fabrication of transparent air filter via
electrospinning methods. (b) Molecular model and formula of different polymers including
PAN, PVP, PS, PVA, and PP with calculated dipole moments of the repeating units of each
polymer. (c) SEM images of PAN, PVP, PS, PVA, and PP transparent filters before filtration.
(d) SEM images of PAN, PVP, PS, PVA, and PP transparent filters after filtration showing the PM
attachment. Scale bars in c,d: 5 μm. (e) Removal efficiency comparison between PAN, PVP, PS,
PVA, PP carbon and copper transparent filters with same fiber diameter of ∼200 nm and same
transmittance of ∼70%. Error bar represents the standard deviation of three replicate
measurements. (f ) Demonstration of using transparent filter to shut off PM from the outdoor
(right bottle) from entering the indoor (left bottle) environment. Source: Liu et al. 2015 [18].
Reprinted with permission of Springer Nature.
6.4 Applications 203
the membrane filter. The molecular models and formulae of these polymers are
shown in Figure 6.5b, corresponding to their different polarity with the dipole
moments of 3.6, 2.3, 0.7, 1.2, and 0.6 D for the repeating units of PAN, PVP, PS,
PVA, and PP, respectively. Therefore, these fibrous membranes are able to cap-
ture PM, as shown in Figure 6.5c,d. Among them, the PAN nanofibers showed the
greatest efficiency of PM2.5 removal (>95%) (Figure 6.5e) and 90% transparency
under hazardous air quality conditions (PM2.5 mass concentration > 250 μg m−3 ).
The PM2.5 capture was ascribed to the dipole–dipole and dipole-induced inter-
actions in this work, suggesting that polymers with higher dipole moment would
have better removal efficiencies of PM particles. As shown in Figure 6.5f, the left
bottle was still clear after filtering out PM, which demonstrated the PM removal
performance of the PAN transparent filter.
100
Removal efficiency (%)
80
60
40
20
0
0.3 0.5 1.0 2.5 5.0 10
(a) PM size (μm) (b)
Figure 6.6 (a) Removal efficiency of PM particles from car exhaust gas. (b) PM number
concentration measurement of car exhaust with air filter. The inset shows a stainless steel pipe
coated with a PI filter. Source: Zhang et al. 2016 [39]. Reprinted with permission of American
Chemical Society.
204 6 Emerging Nanofibrous Air Filters for PM2.5 Removal
PMDA
1) Electrospinning Homogenizing
2) Thermal
ODA imidization
Poly(amic acid)
Polyimide nanofiber
Nanofiber dispersion
membrane
Freezing
Thermal Freeze
treatment drying
Chemical Physical
cross-linking entanglement
(29.7–31.8 mW m−1 K−1 ), and high-temperature stability (300 ∘ C for 240 hours
in air) in different dimensions. With the combination of the structural features
of the aerogels and the specific physicochemical property of PI, the filtration
efficiency remained above 99.9% under the mass concentration of PM2.5 above
200 μg m−3 for 22 hours at a velocity of 0.25 m s−1 . The calculated sorption
dynamics was about 4.3 μg g−1 s−1 .
In addition, to mitigate fire and explosion risk in operation with combustible
filtrates, in 2018, Cui et al. further developed a multifunctional nanofibrous air
filter that not only efficiently captured PM but also possessed a flame retardant
design [98]. This multifunctionality design was achieved through fabricating an
electrospun core–shell nanofibrous membrane consisting of the polar polymer
Nylon-6 as the shell and the flame retardant triphenyl phosphate (TPP) as the
core (Figure 6.8a). The Nylon-6 polymeric shell ensured the high capture effi-
ciency of 99.00% for PM2.5 owing to its large dipole moment initiating strong
binding between the fiber surface and polar PM. In terms of the flame retardant
core, TPP, it could be released through the melted Nylon-6 shell during combus-
tion of the flammable filtrate and simultaneously suppress the fire by scavenging
•
H and • OH free radicals generated from combustion (Figure 6.8b–e) [99]. As
a result, the self-extinguishing time of the filtrate-attached air filter was nearly
instantaneous of 0 s g−1 compared with 150 s g−1 for Nylon-6 alone.
Shell: O
Syringe Nylon-6: P
O O Heat Phosphorus-containing
TPP: O
TPP free radicals (·PO)
PO H HPO
O
Core: TPP Nylon-6: PO OH HPO2
N n
H
Collec
(a) tor (b) (c)
Ignition Flame
Ignition Flame and sources
sources Airflow retarded
Airflow explosions
TPP
Nylon-6 @Nylon-6
(d) fiber (e) fiber
Figure 6.8 (a) Schematic illustration for the fabrication of the nanofibers by electrospinning.
(b) Molecular structure of TPP and Nylon-6. (c) The TPP exhibits flame retardancy by
scavenging • H and • OH free radicals during combustion. (d) The air filtration material
composed of Nylon-6 nanofibers. Combustive dusts accumulated on the filter are easily
ignited by ignition sources, leading to dust explosions. (e) The working mechanism of the
multifunctional air filter. Source: Liu et al. 2018 [98]. Reprinted with permission of American
Chemical Society.
membrane mask exhibited high PM capture efficiency (99.6% for PM2.5 ) with low
pressure drop. As shown in Figure 6.9, it showed excellent heat dissipation and
high IR transparency (92.1%), generating the radiative cooling effect. Separately,
if the nanoPE substrate was coated by a thin layer of Ag before the nylon fiber
deposition, it gave rise to a high IR reflectance (87.0%) for personal warming
purpose. These two type of face masks are desirable for personal thermal comfort
under hot and cold weather, respectively.
Cooling:
Nylon-6 fi
ber
Fiber/
nanoPE
E
noP Warming:
che d na
Pun
°C
Nanopore
37.5
Nanofiber Fiber/Ag
/nanoPE
23.5
(a) (b)
Airflow
(b)
Figure 6.10 (a) Photograph of a roll-to-roll process for the transferring of electrospun
nanofiber film onto a plastic mesh in a continuous fabrication process for PM2.5 filter. Source:
Xu et al. 2016 [40]. Reprinted with permission of American Chemical Society. (b) Schematic
illustration of the blow-spinning method of the window screen coating for indoor protection.
(c) Real window consisting of a removable metallic screen coated with PAN blow-spun fibers.
(d) Successful wiping of nanofibers from the window screen using a tissue paper. Source:
Khalid et al. 2017 [47]. Reprinted with permission of American Chemical Society.
6.4 Applications 207
Electrostatic zone
Pl nanofibers
Pl nanofibers +R-TENG
(a) (b)
Transparent,
reusable, active
PM filter
Ag NW
percolation
PM network
Polluted air Filtrated air
(c) + Voltage
Figure 6.11 Schematic illustration of the filtration mechanism. (a) Without R-TENG. (b) With
R-TENG. Source: Gu et al. 2017 [102]. Reprinted with permission of American Chemical Society.
(c) Schematic illustration of the filtration mechanism of the Ag nanowire-coated filter. Source:
Jeong et al. 2017 [103]. Reprinted with permission of American Chemical Society.
208 6 Emerging Nanofibrous Air Filters for PM2.5 Removal
μg m−3 μg m−3
μg m−3 μg m−3
Figure 6.12 The schematic diagram of the measurement of the removal efficiency of the face
mask made of the TAF. The face mask was worn by a man for four hours. The concentration of
PM2.5 changed from severely polluted to good and from heavily polluted to excellent. Source:
Bai et al. 2018 [104]. Reprinted with permission of John Wiley and Sons.
of multilayers of the PTFE and nylon fabrics, which can be charged by simply
rubbing the PTFE and nylon fabrics against each other. The removal efficiency
of the charged TAF can be greatly enhanced by introducing the electrostatic
attraction in removing the PMs. After charging, the removal efficiencies of PM0.5
and PM2.5 were increased from 26.3% to 84.7% (3.22 times increase) and 69.1%
to 96.0% (1.39 times increase), respectively. As shown in Figure 6.12, the PM2.5
filtering through the worn face mask decreased from 266.71 μg m−3 (severely
polluted condition) to 54.71 μg m−3 (good air condition), and correspondingly,
PM2.5 in heavily polluted condition with the concentration of 192.32 μg m−3
could be decreased to 27.93 μg m−3 , representing an excellent air condition. In
addition, the TAF can be easily cleaned with commercial detergent, and the
removal efficiency was maintained after five washing cycles.
92 24
0.020 SO2 dynamic adsorption capacity
Pressure drop
capacity (g/g)
84
0.010 12
80
0.005 6
76
0.000 0
N N N N N N N N N N N
PA /PA 9/PA /PA 4/PA 8/PA PA 8/PA 4/PA 9/PA /PA
O3 9 H 2 -7 - - 7 9 H2
Al 2 OF-1 -66-N MOF ZIF ZIF OF- OF-1 66-N
M iO - -M M -
(a) U Mg (b) Mg UiO
Figure 6.13 (a) PM removal efficiency of PAN filter, Al2 O3 /PAN filter, and PAN/MOF filters
tested on hazy days in Beijing (T = 23.4 ∘ C, RH = 58.6%, PM2.5 = 350 μg m−3 ,
PM10 = 720 μg m−3 ). (b) The dynamic adsorption capacities of SO2 on PAN filter and PAN filters
with different MOF materials at 25 ∘ C with a 100 ppm of SO2 /N2 flow at the rate of 50 ml min−1 .
Source: Zhang et al. 2016 [23]. Reprinted with permission of American Chemical Society.
Catalyst
pulverization
MOF
Substrate MOF Particulate matter
Power plant
MOF@Plastic mesh
Refinery (80 ~ 100 °C)
MOFilters
Traffic MOF@Melamine foam MOF@Metal mesh
(~150 °C) (>300 °C)
Biomass
combustion
MOF@Nonwoven fabric MOF@Glass cloth
Roll-to-roll production (150–250 °C) (>300 °C)
Figure 6.14 The schematic representation of the roll-to-roll production of various MOF-based
filters for PM removal. Source: Chen et al. 2017 [91]. Reprinted with permission of John Wiley
and Sons.
210 6 Emerging Nanofibrous Air Filters for PM2.5 Removal
PM2.5 PM10
100
PM removal (%)
90
80
70
60
0
2 μm PP ZIF-8_PP H-ZIF-L_PP
(a) (b)
Figure 6.15 (a) SEM images of hierarchical flowerlike MOFs. (b) PM removal efficiencies of PP
microfibers, ZIF-8_PP microfibers, and H-ZIF-L_PP microfibers. Source: Koo et al. 2018 [116].
Reprinted with permission of American Chemical Society.
6.4 Applications 211
Diffusion 98
Co(AC)2/PAN
97
96
95
3 6 9 12 15 18 21 24 27 30
Date (d)
(a) (b)
Figure 6.16 (a) Schematic representation of the fabrication procedures for MOF-based PAN
filters. (b) Long-term PM2.5 filtration test results for MOF-based PAN filters. Inset image in (b) is
the photograph of a large-scale MOF-based PAN filters (length: 36 cm). Source: Bian et al. 2018
[117]. Reprinted with permission of Royal Society of Chemistry.
rface
s on su
ction al group
Rich fun
COOH COOH
R R (hydrophobic)
R: Hydrophobic OH OH
NH2 N Hydrogen bonding
Charge–charge interaction
Polar O C Hydrophobic interaction ...
H H
PM Charged/Ionic C Polar
H H Aldimine linkage
Hydrophobic
PM Charged/Ionic
(a) Formaldehyde
Hydrophobic
100% O
100%
C Formaldehyde C O Carbon monoxide
Removal efficiency (%)
80% H H
80%
50% 50%
2.25 g m–2
2.80 g m–2
3.43 g m–2
3.80 g m–2
2.25 g m–2
2.80 g m–2
3.43 g m–2
3.80 g m–2
164 g m–2
164 g m–2
20% 20%
5% 5%
(b) Gelatin fibers HEPA (c) Gelatin fibers HEPA
Figure 6.17 (a) Schematic illustration of the interaction-based filtration mechanism for
soy-protein-based nanofabrics. Source: Souzandeh et al. 2016 [58]. Reprinted with permission
of American Chemical Society. (b) Formaldehyde (HCHO) removal efficiency comparison
between gelatin-based filters with different areal density and that of the commercial filter.
(c) Carbon monoxide (CO) removal efficiency comparison between gelatin-based filters with
different areal density and that of commercial filter. Source: Souzandeh et al. 2016 [59].
Reprinted with permission of Royal Society of Chemistry.
212 6 Emerging Nanofibrous Air Filters for PM2.5 Removal
Dust
PTFE PTFE
Airflow
Clean air
Polluted air
ZnO nanorods
Figure 6.18 Schematic of the filtration process of the ZnO-functionalized PTFE filters and the
SEM images of the filters modified with ZnO nanorods. Source: Zhong et al. 2015 [77].
Reprinted with permission of American Chemical Society.
80
(c) (d) 40
20
0
40 80 120
Time (min)
Figure 6.19 (a) The antibacterial results of the pristine filter for 40, 80, and 120 minutes.
(b), (c), and (d) were the antibacterial results of the composite filter for 40, 80, and 120 minutes,
respectively. (e) Antibacterial rate of the composite filter at different test time (40, 80, and
120 minutes). Source: Zhao et al. 2015 [75]. Reprinted with permission of Royal Society of
Chemistry.
100 100
Removal efficiency (%)
60 60 PM2.5 concentration:
3 mm, 2.51 cm s−1
3 mm, 3.35 cm s−1 300–600 (μg m–3)
40 40 Velocity: 3.35 cm s–1
6 mm, 2.51 cm s−1
6 mm, 3.35 cm s−1
20 9 mm, 2.51 cm s−1 20
9 mm, 3.35 cm s−1
0 0
0 300 600 900 1200 1500 1800 0 20 40 60 80 100 120
(a) PM2.5 concentration (μg m–3) (b) Time (h)
Oil absorption
Pump
Hydrophobic
HAP aerogel
Oil phase
Water phase
(c)
Figure 6.20 (a) PM2.5 removal efficiencies of the hydrophobic HAP nanowire aerogel filter with
different thicknesses at different PM2.5 concentrations and airflow velocities. (b) PM2.5 removal
efficiencies of the hydrophobic HAP nanowire aerogel filter (thickness 9 mm) for a long period
of time (120 hours). (c) Schematic illustration of the continuous oil/water separation device
prepared using the hydrophobic HAP nanowire aerogel. Source: Zhang et al. 2018 [136].
Reprinted with permission of American Chemical Society.
Filter
Downstream
Upstream
Re-entrainment
(a) Drainage
Bounce Collision Drainage
Superoleophobic
Fiber
2
1
1
Coalescence
(b)
Figure 6.21 (a) Oil disposal routes during oil mist filtration. (b) Schematic illustration of oil
mist interaction with fibers with different surface wettabilities. Source: Wei et al. 2018 [137].
Reprinted with permission of Royal Society of Chemistry.
216 6 Emerging Nanofibrous Air Filters for PM2.5 Removal
6.5 Conclusion
In conclusion, nanofibrous air filters have evolved rapidly in the past 10 years
and have shown great PM2.5 removal performance along with other desirable
features (e.g. high transparency, large-scale production, high thermal stability,
thermal management, electricity assistance, the removal of toxic gases chemi-
cals, antibacterial property, and oil removal). However, there are challenges lying
ahead as summarized in the following.
In the current designs, the majority of the nanofibers were deposited on non-
woven substrates to construct composite filter media, and the active nanofibrous
layers could not stand alone due to their low mechanical strength. Thus, increas-
ing mechanical strength and the filtration performances of the nanofibrous layers
deserve more attention. Continuous and inexpensive production procedure of
nanofibrous air filters must be developed to further reduce their production cost
and affordability.
Many of the current nanofibrous filter designs have multiple functions, but
they are put together plainly without synergy. Thus one of the future directions
of nanofibrous air filters is to have more intelligence with multifunctions being
smartly integrated into one device with feedback communication cycle to maxi-
mize its performance.
The self-cleaning and/or antifouling capability would improve the filters’
longevity, and better thermal management can further increase their comfort
during their use [100]. The incorporation of energy harvesting and generating
materials (e.g. piezoelectric or triboelectric materials) would make possible some
unprecedented applications, such as air filter with self-powered environmental
sensors and air filters with their own lighting systems.
Last but not the least, the interaction mechanisms between PM particles and
nanofibers have been paid little attention in the past and are largely unclear, so
more fundamental and detailed experimental investigations are warranted. With
a clearer understanding to the interaction mechanisms, more effective air filter
can thus be rationally designed and fabricated in the future.
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