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1.
Green Energy & Environment ; 8(3):673-697, 2023.
Article in English | Web of Science | ID: covidwho-20237399

ABSTRACT

Air-borne pollutants in particulate matter (PM) form, produced either physically during industrial processes or certain biological routes, have posed a great threat to human health. Particularly during the current COVID-19 pandemic, effective filtration of the virus is an urgent matter worldwide. In this review, we first introduce some fundamentals about PM, including its source and classification, filtration mechanisms, and evaluation parameters. Advanced filtration materials and their functions are then summarized, among which polymers and MOFs are discussed in detail together with their antibacterial performance. The discussion on the application is divided into end-of-pipe treatment and source control. Finally, we conclude this review with our prospective view on future research in this area. (c) 2022 Institute of Process Engineering, Chinese Academy of Sciences. Publishing services by Elsevier B.V. on behalf of KeAi Communications Co., Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

2.
Sci Total Environ ; 838(Pt 1): 155884, 2022 Sep 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-2328273

ABSTRACT

Public health departments such as CDC and California Department of Public Health (CA-DPH) advise HEPA-purifiers to limit transmission of SARS-CoV-2 indoor spaces. CA-DPH recommends air exchanges per hour (ACH) of 4-6 air for rooms with marginal ventilation and 6-12 in classrooms often necessitating multiple HEPA-purifiers per room, unaffordable in under-resourced community settings. Pressure to seek cheap, rapid air filtration resulted in proliferation of lower-cost, Do-It-Yourself (DIY) air purifiers whose performance is not well characterized compared to HEPA-purifiers. Primary metrics are clean air delivery rate (CADR), noise generated (dBA), and affordability ($$). CADR measurement often requires hard-to-replicate laboratory experiments with generated aerosols. We use simplified, low-cost measurement tools of ambient aerosols enabling scalable evaluation of aerosol filtration efficiencies (0.3 to 10 µm), estimated CADR, and noise generation to compare 3 HEPA-purifiers and 9 DIY purifier designs. DIY purifiers consist of one or two box fans coupled to single MERV 13-16 filters (1″-5″ thick) or quad filters in a cube. Accounting for reduced filtration efficiency of MERV 13-16 filters (versus HEPA) at the most penetrating particle size of 0.3 µm, estimated CADR of DIY purifiers using 2″ (67%), 4″ (66%), and 5″ (85%) filters at lowest fan speed was 293 cfm ($35), 322 cfm ($58), and 405 cfm ($120) comparable to best-in-class, low-noise generating HEPA-purifier running at maximum speed with at 282 cfm ($549). Quad filter designs, popularly known Corsi-Rosenthal boxes, achieved gains in estimated CADR below 80% over single filter designs, less than the 100% gain by adding a second DIY purifier. Replacing one of the four filters with a second fan resulted in gains of 125%-150% in estimated CADR. Tested DIY alternatives using lower-efficiency, single filters compare favorably to tested HEPA-purifiers in estimated CADR, noise generated at five to ten times lower cost, enabling cheap, rapid aerosol removal indoors.


Subject(s)
Air Filters , Air Pollution, Indoor , COVID-19 , Aerosols , Air Pollution, Indoor/analysis , Air Pollution, Indoor/prevention & control , COVID-19/prevention & control , Dust , Humans , Pandemics/prevention & control , SARS-CoV-2
3.
Fangzhi Xuebao/Journal of Textile Research ; 44(1):56-63, 2023.
Article in Chinese | Scopus | ID: covidwho-2306591

ABSTRACT

Objective The epidemic of COVID-19 and its variants is endangering human health. Wearing protective masks can effectively reduce the infection risk by resisting the inhalation of the polluted air containing the coronavirus. Electrospun polyamide nanofibers can be used as the core layer of protective masks and have lately received growing attention because of their high filtration performance and robust mechanical properties. However, existing electrospun polyamide nanofiber filters are usually prepared from toxic solvents which could cause severe environmental pollution and endanger workers' health, hence, their practical application should be restricted. Therefore, it is imperative to seek and develop green-solvent-based polyamide nanofiber filters. Method Innovative polyamide nanofiber filters were developed by direct electrospinning technique based on green solvents (Fig. 1). Ethanol as the solvent and water as the nonsolvent were adopted to prepare the green-solvent-based polyamide (GSPA) nanofibers by designing spinning solutions with different ethanol/water mass ratios (i.e., 10: 0, 9: 1, 8: 2, 7: 3, and 6: 4) . During electrospinning process, the working voltage, tip-to-collector distance, and solution extrusion speed were set as 30 kV, 15 cm and 1 mL/h, respectively. The nanofibers prepared with the different ethanol/water ratios were denoted as GSPA - 0, GSPA - 1, GSPA - 2, GSPA-3, and GSPA-4, respectively. Results It was found that water content had a great influence on the morphological structures of polyamide nanofibers (Fig. 2) - After introducing a small amount of water, the obtained GSPA - 1 nanofibers featuring thinner diameter of 332 nm were compared to the GSPA-0 nanofibers (499 nm). The enhanced conductivity (10. 5 μS/cm) of waterborne spinning solutions (Fig. 3) stimulated more charges on spinning jets and led to larger electrostatic force, thus greatly elongating the jets and thinning the fiber diameter. However, with the further increment of water concentrations from 20% to 40%, the obtained fibers exhibited an increased average diameter ranging from 443 to 1 553 nm, which was mainly attributed to the larger viscosity of spinning solutions. Although water cannot dissolve polyamide, homogenous waterborne polyamide/ethanol solutions can still be obtained with different ethanol/water mass ratios within a broad area in the stable region (Fig. 3) - The average pore size of GSPA -1 membranes decreased by 55% compared with that of GSPA-0 membranes, contributing to high filtration efficiency. Moreover, with different concentrations (10%, 20%, 30%) of water, the fluffy structure of GSPA nanofibers were achieved with a high porosity (> 80%), which would offer more passageways to transmit air rapidly. As the water concentration increased, the breaking strength of membranes increased at first and then decreased (Fig. 5), and the GSPA- 1 membranes exhibited the highest breaking strength of 5. 6 MPa, which was believed to be related to the enhanced entanglements and contacts among the adjacent fibers because of the small fiber diameter. The GSPA -1 membranes displayed the highest filtration efficiency (99. 02%) for the most penetration particles (PM0.3) by virtue of the small fiber diameter but suffered from poor permeability with a pressure drop of 158 Pa. Moreover, the GSPA- 1 membranes possessed the highest quality factor of 0. 029 3 Pa, suggesting the optimal filtration performance among different GSPA membranes. A high PM0.3 removal efficiency (>95%) was achieved for GSPA-1 filters under various airflow velocities ranging from 10 to 90 L/min (Fig. 7). Compared with conventional melt-blown fibers, the GSPA nanofibers featured a smaller diameter and higher Knudsen number (Fig. 8), and PM0.3 were captured mainly on the surfaces of green polyamide nanofibers (Fig. 9), demonstrating the higher adsorption ability benefiting from the larger specific surface area. Conclusion A cleaner production of polyamide nanofibers for air filtration was proposed by direct electrospinning based on green and sustaina le binary solvents of water and ethanol. For the first time, the structure including fiber diameter, porosity, and pore size of electrospun polyamide nanofibers were precisely tailored by manipulating water concentration in spinning solutions. The prepared environmentally friendly polyamide nanofiber filters feature the interconnected porous structure with the nanoscale ID building blocks (332 nm), mean pore size (0.7 μm), and porosity (84%), thus achieving efficient PM0.3 capture performance with the filtration efficiency of 99. 02% and pressure drop of 158 Pa, which could be comparable to previous toxic-solvent-processed nanofibers. Moreover, the GSPA nanofibers exhibit robust mechanical properties with an impressive breaking strength (5 . 6 MPa) and elongation (163. 9%), contributing to withstanding the external forces and deformation in the practical assembly and usage of resultant filters. It is envisaged that the green-solvent-based polyamide nanofibers could be used as promising candidates for next-generation air filters, and the proposed waterborne spinning strategy can provide valuable insights for cleaner production of advanced polyamide textiles. © 2023 China Textile Engineering Society. All rights reserved.

4.
Fibers and Polymers ; 2023.
Article in English | Scopus | ID: covidwho-2306465

ABSTRACT

The global outbreak of COVID-19 results in the surge of disposable sanitary supplies, especially personal protective face masks. However, the charge dissipation of the electret meltblown nonwovens, which predominate in the commercial face mask filters, confines the durability and safety of commercial face masks. Furthermore, most of the face masks are made from nondegradable materials (such as PP) or part of their degradation products are toxic and contaminative to the environment. Herein, a type of face mask with biodegradable and highly effective PLA bi-layer complex fibrous membrane as filter core is reported. The prepared PLA complex membrane possesses a high-filtration efficiency of 99.1% for PM0.3 while providing a favorable pressure drop of 93.2 Pa. With the PLA complex membrane as the filter core, our face mask exhibits comparable or even higher wearability to commercial face masks, which further manifests our designed PLA complex membrane a promising filter media for face masks. © 2023, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to the Korean Fiber Society.

5.
Filtration and Separation ; 60(1):18-21, 2023.
Article in English | Scopus | ID: covidwho-2303943

ABSTRACT

Indoor air quality in schools has become a major concern in recent years with factors such as pollution and the impact of Covid-19 highly significant. Here we look at how filtration is playing a key role in protecting the health of students. © 2023 The authors.

6.
Macromolecular Materials and Engineering ; 2023.
Article in English | Scopus | ID: covidwho-2303201

ABSTRACT

Air pollution is one of the major global problems causing around 7 million dead per year. In fact, a connection between infectious disease transmission, including COVID-19, and air pollution has been proved: COVID-19 consequences on human health are found to be more severe in areas characterized by high levels of particulate matter (PM). Therefore, after the COVID-19 pandemic, the production of air filtration devices with high filtration efficiency has gained more and more attention. Herein, a review of the post-COVID-19 pandemic progress in nanofibrous polymeric membranes for air filtration is provided. First, a brief discussion on the different types of filtration mechanism and the key parameters of air filtration is proposed. The materials recently used for the production of nanofibrous filter membranes are presented, distinguishing between non-biodegradable polymeric materials and biodegradable ones. Subsequently, production technique proposed for the fabrication of nanofibrous membranes, i.e., electrospinning and solution blow spinning, are presented aiming to analyze and compare filtration efficiency, pressure drop, reusability and durability of the different polymeric system processed with different techniques. Finally, present challenges and future perspectives of nanofibrous polymeric membranes for air filtration are discussed with a particular emphasis on strategies to produce greener and more performant devices. © 2023 The Authors. Macromolecular Materials and Engineering published by Wiley-VCH GmbH.

7.
Process Saf Environ Prot ; 174: 548-560, 2023 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-2306460

ABSTRACT

Aerosols such as PM2.5 and PM10 can have an immense impact on human health. With the outbreak of SARS-CoV-2, it is urgent to filter aerosols by media filtration technology. Electrospun nanofibers are a promising material for achieving high efficiency, low resistance, light weight, and environmentally friendly air filtration. But research on filtration theory and computer simulation of nanofiber media is still lacking. The traditional method involving computational fluid dynamics (CFD) and Maxwell's first-order slip boundary overestimates the slip velocity on the fiber surface. In this study, a new modified slip boundary was proposed, which introduced a slip velocity coefficient on the basis of the no-slip boundary to address the slip wall. Our simulation results were compared with the experimental pressure drop and particle capture efficiency of real polyacrylonitrile (PAN) nanofiber media. The computational accuracy on pressure drop of the modified slip boundary improved 24.6% and 11.2% compared with that of the no-slip boundary and Maxwell's first-order slip boundary, respectively. It was found that the particle capture efficiency near the most-penetrating particle size (MPPS) was significantly increased when slip effect occurred. This may be explained by the slip velocity on the fiber surface, which would make particles more accessible to the fiber surface and captured by interception.

8.
Nanocomposites ; 8(1):13-23, 2022.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2271668

ABSTRACT

Membrane materials might be used for face protection because they can decontaminate the inhaled air from particle pollution and viruses like the SARS-Cov0-2 which damages our respiration system. In this study, plyethersulfone membranes (PES) were synthesized with green solvent at room temperature and its filtration effectiveness was investigated against nano-bacteria (size 0.05 to 0.2 µm) by measuring their Bacterial Filtration Efficiency (BFE) and micro aerosol size (0.3 µm), and Particulate Filtration Efficiency (PFE). The average SARS-CoV-2 diameters are between 50 nm to 160 nm. A series of experiments were performed to accomplish between 0.03 to 0.21 µm PES sponge like diameters so that can be used for SARS-CoV-2 filtration. Results showed that nanofiltration/ultrafiltration could filter 99.9% of bacteria and aerosol from contaminated air the size of the Covid-19 molecule.

9.
J Hosp Infect ; 135: 81-89, 2023 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-2253380

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Aerosol spread of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2) is a major problem in hospitals, leading to an increase in supplementary high-efficiency particulate air filtration aimed at reducing nosocomial transmission. This article reports a natural experiment that occurred when an air cleaning unit (ACU) on a medicine for older people ward was switched off accidentally while being commissioned. AIM: To assess aerosol transport within the ward and determine whether the ACU reduced airborne particulate matter (PM) levels. METHODS: An ACU was placed in a ward comprising two six-bedded bays plus three single-bed isolation rooms which had previously experienced several outbreaks of coronavirus disease 2019. During commissioning, real-time measurements of key indoor air quality parameters (PM1-10, CO2, temperature and humidity) were collected from multiple sensors over 2 days. During this period, the ACU was switched off accidentally for approximately 7 h, allowing the impact of the intervention on PM to be assessed. FINDINGS: The ACU reduced the PM counts considerably (e.g. PM1 65.5-78.2%) throughout the ward (P<0.001 all sizes), with positive correlation found for all PM fractions and CO2 (r=0.343-0.817; all P<0.001). PM counts rose/fell simultaneously when the ACU was off, with correlation of PM signals from multiple locations (e.g. r=0.343-0.868; all P<0.001) for particulates <1 µm). CONCLUSION: Aerosols migrated rapidly between the various ward subcompartments, suggesting that social distancing alone cannot prevent nosocomial transmission of SARS-CoV-2 as this fails to mitigate longer-range (>2 m) transmission. The ACU reduced PM levels considerably throughout the ward space, indicating its potential as an effective intervention to reduce the risk posed by infectious airborne particles.


Subject(s)
Air Pollution, Indoor , COVID-19 , Cross Infection , Humans , Aged , Particulate Matter/analysis , COVID-19/prevention & control , SARS-CoV-2 , Carbon Dioxide , Respiratory Aerosols and Droplets , Air Pollution, Indoor/analysis , Hospitals , Cross Infection/prevention & control , United Kingdom
10.
Nanomaterials (Basel) ; 13(1)2022 Dec 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-2243579

ABSTRACT

The 2019 coronavirus outbreak and worsening air pollution have triggered the search for manufacturing effective protective masks preventing both particulate matter and biohazard absorption through the respiratory tract. Therefore, the design of advanced filtering textiles combining efficient physical barrier properties with antimicrobial properties is more newsworthy than ever. The objective of this work was to produce a filtering electrospun membrane incorporating a biocidal agent that would offer both optimal filtration efficiency and fast deactivation of entrapped viruses and bacteria. After the eco-friendly electrospinning process, polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) nanofibers were stabilized by crosslinking with 1,2,3,4-butanetetracarboxylic acid (BTCA). To compensate their low mechanical properties, nanofiber membranes with variable grammages were directly electrospun on a meltblown polypropylene (PP) support of 30 g/m2. The results demonstrated that nanofibers supported on PP with a grammage of around only 2 g/m2 presented the best compromise between filtration efficiencies of PM0.3, PM0.5, and PM3.0 and the pressure drop. The filtering electrospun membranes loaded with benzalkonium chloride (ADBAC) as a biocidal agent were successfully tested against E. coli and S. aureus and against human coronavirus strain HCoV-229E. This new biocidal filter based on electrospun nanofibers supported on PP nonwoven fabric could be a promising solution for personal and collective protection in a pandemic context.

11.
Separation & Purification Technology ; 308:N.PAG-N.PAG, 2023.
Article in English | Academic Search Complete | ID: covidwho-2237499

ABSTRACT

[Display omitted] • Nylon-6 micro-nanofiber composite membranes had uniform space gradient structure. • Composite membranes had good filtration performance against ultrafine particles. • The masks had stable protection performance and comfortable wearing experience. Compared of traditional melt-blown nonwoven materials, micro-nanofiber composite membranes with uniform spatial gradient structure will be the development trend of high efficiency and low resistance filtration materials, especially against ultrafine particles with kinetic diameter less than 0.25 (PM 0.25). Herein, Nylon-6 micro-nanofiber composite membranes (Nylon-6 FCMs) with three-dimensional (3D) uniform gradient structure were prepared by air jet spinning under the help of PEO. The fluffy 3D gradient structure possessed a uniform gradual pore gradient from large to small, ensuring the PM 0.25 were captured by exact grading under high gas flow due to the form of special "trumpet-like" gas passage inside the membranes. The structure of Nylon-6 FCMs could be controlled and exhibited high tensile strength, good moisture permeability, excellent filtration performance. Among them, the FCM-1 with a uniform gradual pore gradient could achieve the optimal filtering performance with filtration efficiency (99.99 %) and pressure drop (144 Pa). The mask prepared using this Nylon-6 FCMs also displayed good protective effect with comparable air permeability (221.84 mm·s−1) and moisture permeability (181.84 g·m−2·h−1) compared of commercial melt-blown masks. Most importantly, this mask prepared still could maintain good filtration performance even in high temperature and high humidity environment, providing users more comfortable wearing experience and stable protection performance, especially under the current COVID-19 outbreak. [ FROM AUTHOR]

12.
J Memb Sci ; 672: 121473, 2023 Apr 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-2232719

ABSTRACT

The COVID-19 pandemic has caused serious social and public health problems. In the field of personal protection, the facial masks can prevent infectious respiratory diseases, safeguard human health, and promote public safety. Herein, we focused on preparing a core filter layer for masks using electrospun polyvinyl butyral/apocynum venetum extract nanofibrous membranes (PVB/AVE NMs), with durable interception efficiency and antibacterial properties. In the spinning solution, AVE acted as a salt to improve electrical conductivity, and achieve long-lasting interception efficiency with adjustable pore size. It also played the role of an antibacterial agent in PVB/AVE NMs to achieve win-win effects. The hydrophobicity of PVB-AVE-6% was 120.9° whereas its filterability reached 98.3% when the pressure drop resistance was 142 Pa. PVB-AVE-6% exhibited intriguing properties with great antibacterial rates of 99.38% and 98.96% against S. aureus and E. coli, respectively. After a prolonged usability test of 8 h, the filtration efficiency of the PVB/AVE masks remained stable at over 97.7%. Furthermore, the antibacterial rates of the PVB/AVE masks on S. aureus and E. coli were 96.87% and 96.20% respectively, after using for 2 d. These results indicate that PVB/AVE NMs improve the protective performance of ordinary disposable masks, which has certain application in air filtration.

13.
J Appl Polym Sci ; 140(5): e53406, 2023 Feb 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-2231430

ABSTRACT

During the global spread of COVID-19, high demand and limited availability of melt-blown filtration material led to a manufacturing backlog of N95 Filtering Facepiece Respirators (FFRs). This shortfall prompted the search for alternative filter materials that could be quickly mass produced while meeting N95 FFR filtration and breathability performance standards. Here, an unsupported, nonwoven layer of uncharged polystyrene (PS) microfibers was produced via electrospinning that achieves N95 performance standards based on physical parameters (e.g., filter thickness) alone. PS microfibers 3-6 µm in diameter and deposited in an ~5 mm thick filter layer are favorable for use in FFRs, achieving high filtration efficiencies (≥97.5%) and low pressure drops (≤15 mm H2O). The PS microfiber filter demonstrates durability upon disinfection with hydroxyl radicals (•OH), maintaining high filtration efficiencies and low pressure drops over six rounds of disinfection. Additionally, the PS microfibers exhibit antibacterial activity (1-log removal of E. coli) and can be modified readily through integration of silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) during electrospinning to enhance their activity (≥3-log removal at 25 wt% AgNP integration). Because of their tunable performance, potential reusability with disinfection, and antimicrobial properties, these electrospun PS microfibers may represent a suitable, alternative filter material for use in N95 FFRs.

14.
Materials Research Express ; 9(12), 2022.
Article in English | Web of Science | ID: covidwho-2188025

ABSTRACT

Since the outbreak of the COVID-19 epidemic, a large number of disposable protective masks have been manufactured and used, and the abandonment of masks has caused enormous pollution. In this paper the chitosan (CS), polyvinyl alcohol (PVA), and water were used as raw materials and the nanofiber membranes were prepared by electrostatic spinning. The CS/PVA fiber membranes were crosslinked by glutaraldehyde hydrochloric acid vapour. The fiber morphology, hydrolysis resistance, antibacterial properties, chemical structure, thermal stability and filtration performance of nanofiber membranes were characterized. Results shows that the antibacterial performance of the crosslinked composite nanofibers exceeds 97%, the thermal stability is improved, and the fiber morphology is not destroyed. The hybridized fiber membrane has high filtration performance, excellent antibacterial and hydrolysis resistance, which broadening the PVA fiber membrane application. It is expected to replace traditional protective materials and relieve environmental pressure.

15.
J Memb Sci ; 672: 121257, 2023 Apr 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-2165705

ABSTRACT

Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic makes protective respirators highly demanded. The respirator materials should filter out viral fine aerosols effectively, allow airflow to pass through easily, and wick away the exhalant moisture timely. However, the commonly used melt-blown nonwovens perform poorly in meeting these requirements simultaneously. Herein, dual-bionic nano-groove structured (NGS) nanofibers are fabricated to serve as protective, breathable and moisture-wicking respirator materials. The creativity of this design is that the tailoring of dual-bionic nano-groove structure, combined with the strong polarity and hydrophilicity of electrospinning polymer, not only endows the nanofibrous materials with improved particle capture ability but also enable them to wick away and transmit breathing moisture. Benefitting from the synthetic effect of hierarchical structure and the intrinsic property of polymers, the resulting NGS nanofibrous membranes show a high filtration efficiency of 99.96%, a low pressure drop of 110 Pa, and a high moisture transmission rate of 5.67 kg m-2 d-1 at the same time. More importantly, the sharp increase of breathing resistance caused by the condensation of exhaled moisture is avoided, overcoming the bottleneck faced by traditional nonwovens and paving a new way for developing protective respirators with high wear comfortability.

16.
Separation and Purification Technology ; : 122921, 2022.
Article in English | ScienceDirect | ID: covidwho-2159797

ABSTRACT

Compared of traditional melt-blown nonwoven materials, micro-nanofiber composite membranes with uniform spatial gradient structure will be the development trend of high efficiency and low resistance filtration materials, especially against ultrafine particles with kinetic diameter less than 0.25 (PM0.25). Herein, Nylon-6 micro-nanofiber composite membranes (Nylon-6 FCMs) with three-dimensional (3D) uniform gradient structure were prepared by air jet spinning under the help of PEO. The fluffy 3D gradient structure possessed a uniform gradual pore gradient from large to small, ensuring the PM0.25 were captured by exact grading under high gas flow due to the form of special "trumpet-like” gas passage inside the membranes. The structure of Nylon-6 FCMs could be controlled and exhibited high tensile strength, good moisture permeability, excellent filtration performance. Among them, the FCM-1 with a uniform gradual pore gradient could achieve the optimal filtering performance with filtration efficiency (99.99%) and pressure drop (144 Pa). The mask prepared using this Nylon-6 FCMs also displayed good protective effect with comparable air permeability (221.84 mm·s-1) and moisture permeability (181.84 g·m-2·h-1) compared of commercial melt-blown masks. Most importantly, this mask prepared still could maintain good filtration performance even in high temperature and high humidity environment, providing users more comfortable wearing experience and stable protection performance, especially under the current COVID-19 outbreak.

17.
Sep Purif Technol ; 302: 122175, 2022 Dec 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-2042130

ABSTRACT

With the increasingly serious air pollution and the rampant coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), preparing high-performance air filter to achieve the effective personal protection has become a research hotspot. Electrospun nanofibrous membrane has become the first choice of air filter because of its small diameter, high specific surface area and porosity. However, improving the filtration performance of the filter only cannot meet the personal needs: it should be given more functions based on high filtration performance to maximize the personal benefits, called, multifunctional, which can also be easily realized by electrospinning technology, and has attracted much attention. In this review, the filtration mechanism of high-performance electrospun air filter is innovatively summarized from the perspective of membrane. On this basis, the specific preparation process, advantages and disadvantages are analyzed in detail. Furthermore, other functions required for achieving maximum personal protection benefits are introduced specifically, and the existing high-performance electrospun air filter with multiple functions are summarized. Finally, the challenges, limitations, and development trends of manufacturing high-performance air filter with multiple functions for personal protection are presented.

18.
Russian Journal of Applied Chemistry ; 95(4):486-498, 2022.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2038257

ABSTRACT

Air pollution is an increasing concern all over the world due to its adverse effects on human health. It claims thousands of lives every year. Hence, the demand for the ventilator, respirator, facemask, body protection, and hospital air filtration has been surging dramatically during the COVID-19 pandemic. Nanofiber membranes with optimal characteristics, such as a high specific surface area and porous microstructure with interconnected pores, can efficiently capture the fine particles (such as bacteria, fungi, virus, etc.). Recently, various types of polymers have been fabricated as electrospun fibrous membranes to be used as an anti-bacterial or anti-viral air filtration media. This review presents a brief overview of air filtration history and its main mechanisms and then the latest research about air filtration with antibacterial and antiviral properties will be reviewed.

19.
Clin Transl Allergy ; 12(4): e12137, 2022 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-2034748

ABSTRACT

Background: Indoor allergens (i.e. from mite, cat and dog) are carried by airborne particulate matter. Thus, removal of particles would reduce allergen exposure. This work aims to assess the performance of air filtration on particulate matter and thus allergen removal in 22 bedrooms. Methods: Indoor air was sampled (with and without air filtration) with a cascade impactor and allergens were measured using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Particulate matter (including ultrafine particles) was also monitored. Results: The median of allergen reduction was 75.2% for Der f 1 (p < 0.001, n = 20), 65.5% for Der p 1 (p = 0.066, n = 4), 76.6% for Fel d 1 (p < 0.01, n = 21) and 89.3% for Can f 1 (p < 0.01, n = 10). For size fractions, reductions were statistically significant for Der f 1 (all p < 0.001), Can f 1 (PM>10 and PM2.5-10, p < 0.01) and Fel d 1 (PM2.5-10, p < 0.01), but not for Der p 1 (all p > 0.05). PM was reduced in all fractions (p < 0.001). The allergens were found in all particle size fractions, higher mite allergens in the PM>10 and for pet allergens in the PM2.5-10. Conclusions: Air filtration was effective in removing mites, cat and dog allergens and also particulate matter from ambient indoor air, offering a fast and simple solution to mitigate allergen exposome.

20.
Clin Infect Dis ; 75(1): e97-e101, 2022 08 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-2017776

ABSTRACT

Airborne severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) was detected in a coronavirus disease 19 (COVID-19) ward before activation of HEPA-air filtration but not during filter operation; SARS-CoV-2 was again detected following filter deactivation. Airborne SARS-CoV-2 was infrequently detected in a COVID-19 intensive care unit. Bioaerosol was also effectively filtered.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , SARS-CoV-2 , Hospitals , Humans
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