Applications of Polymer Nanofibers. Группа авторов

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Applications of Polymer Nanofibers - Группа авторов

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images of (a) the fabrication process for nanofiber yarns and (b) devices of plying and twisting.

      Source: Yan et al. (2016).

Photos depict electrospun fiber yarns of (a) PVAc, (b) PVDF, and (c) PAN.

      Source: Reproduced with permission from Smit et al. (2005). Copyright 2005, Elsevier.

Photos depict scanning electron microscope (SEM) images of (a, b) untreated and (c, d) heat-treated PAN yarns.

      Source: Reproduced with permission from Dabirian et al. (2011). Copyright 2011, Springer.

Photos depict the surface morphology of PAN nanofiber yarn at a twisting air pressure of (a) 0.2 MPa, (b) 0.3 MPa, and (c) 0.5 MPa, (d) cross-sectional SEM image of the nanofiber yarn, and (e) morphology of PAN nanofibers in the yarn.

      Source: Reproduced with permission from He et al. (2015). Copyright 2015, Springer.

      Source: Su et al. (2013).

      (b, c) Images of a core–sheath composite yarn, of which the core was 20 tex PAN normal yarns and the shell was PAN nanofibers.

      Source: Reproduced with permission from Su et al. (2013). Copyright 2013, Springer.

Photo depicts the SEM image of a typical ruptured end of the PA-6 hollow nanofiber yarn.

      Source: Reproduced with permission from Fakhrali et al. (2015). Copyright 2014, Springer.

      Conventional fabrics are usually categorized as nonwoven, woven, knitting, and braiding types. However, fabrics made of nanofibers are mainly in nonwoven forms, and only a few of them are in woven forms (Wang et al. 2016; Deitzel et al. 2001; Kwon and Matsuda 2005; An et al. 2016; Bagherzadeh et al. 2011; Brugo and Palazzetti 2016; Gorjanc et al. 2009; Han et al. 2014, 2006; Kanafchian et al. 2011; Laforgue 2011; Lee and Obendorf 2007a,b; Liu et al. 2013; Park et al. 2013; Qin and Xin 2010; Zhu et al. 2016; Shang et al. 2010; Shao et al. 2016; Su et al. 2014; Sun et al. 2015; Tsai 2005; Wakamatsu et al. 2006; Yokoyama et al. 2009; Zhao et al. 2017).

      Nanofiber‐based nonwovens can be made from randomly arranged nanofiber fabrics and bonded by mechanical forces, chemical forces, or self‐adhesion. While, as to woven fabrics, it needs to prepare nanofiber yarns first, then interweave to shape up. Traditionally, woven fabrics are made from interlacing a set of warp and a set of weft yarns by a weaving machine, which requires the yarns having desired strength and abrasive resistance. In most cases, the mechanical properties of nanofiber yarns cannot meet this demand. It is, therefore, concluded that producing nanofiber woven fabrics are much more complicated compared to nonwoven ones.

      2.4.1 Nanofibrous Nonwoven Fabrics

      Nanofiber nonwoven fabrics can be directly produced through nanofiber spinning process (e.g. electrospinning, centrifugal spinning), whereafter randomly stacked nanofiber fabrics can be collected. With the scale‐up of spinning capability, the commercialized production of nanofiber nonwoven fabrics is no longer a fantasy (Zhou and Gong 2008). Also, nanofiber nonwoven fabrics have been studied for many applications, such as filtrations, tissue engineering scaffolds, release control, catalyst, and enzyme carriers, sensors, and energy storage (Feng 2017; Zhu et al. 2016; Yanilmaz et al. 2016).

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