NANOFIBER PRODUCTION [REVIEW]

Nanofibers are very thin fibers having diameters lower than 100 nm and their lengths might be as long as possible within production limits. The large surface area of nanofibers gives opportunity to functionalize them. Nanofibers have several applications including both applications for industrial p...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: KESKIN Reyhan, GOCEK Ikilem
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Editura Universităţii din Oradea 2016-05-01
Series:Annals of the University of Oradea: Fascicle of Textiles, Leatherwork
Subjects:
Online Access:http://textile.webhost.uoradea.ro/Annals/Vol%20XVII-No%202-2016/Textile/Art.nr.182-pag.%2081-86.pdf
id doaj-dbea8fe33a7e4211a61d8e98d83471d2
record_format Article
spelling doaj-dbea8fe33a7e4211a61d8e98d83471d22020-11-24T22:05:51ZengEditura Universităţii din OradeaAnnals of the University of Oradea: Fascicle of Textiles, Leatherwork1843-813X2016-05-01XVII28186NANOFIBER PRODUCTION [REVIEW] KESKIN Reyhan0GOCEK Ikilem 1Pamukkale University, Engineering Faculty, Dept. of Textile Engineering, Kinikli, 20070, Denizli, TURKEYIstanbul Technical University, Textile Technologies and Design Faculty, Dept. of Textile Engineering, Gumussuyu, 34437, Istanbul, TURKEY, Nanofibers are very thin fibers having diameters lower than 100 nm and their lengths might be as long as possible within production limits. The large surface area of nanofibers gives opportunity to functionalize them. Nanofibers have several applications including both applications for industrial production in many sectors and for research studies. Nanofibers find applications in energy devices such as solar cells, fuel cells and nanogenarators; in filtration applications (such as water/oil filtration, fine particle filtration, aerosol filtration, air filtration, nanoparticle filtration) and in several medical applications including antibacterial efficacy, wound healing, drug delivery and scaffolds for tissue engineering. There are several methods to produce nanofibers: Electrospinning, self assembly, phase separation, bacterial cellulose, templating, drawing, extraction, vapor-phase polymerization, kinetically controlled solution synthesis, conventional chemical polymerization for anyline. Electrospinning is the most widely used method to produce nanofibers.In electrospinning, a high electric field, which is in kilovolts, is applied to a polymer solution. The polymer solution is drawn from a syringe to a collector surface.Electrospinning requires usage of appropriate solvent, removal of evaporating solvent, an adequate power supply to overcome the viscosity and surface tension of the polymer solution; while, jet instability and jet control remain as challenges in electrospinning. Nanofiber production methods possess some disadvantages as: higher cost compared to conventional fiber production methods, health hazards such as inhale risk of nanofibers during production and keeping the environment safe from evaporating solvents used during nanofiber production. Up to date, many researches have been conducted on nanofibers and electrospinning; still, more controllable, more cost effective, more environmentally friendly and safer methods are of essential importance to future applications of nanofibers. http://textile.webhost.uoradea.ro/Annals/Vol%20XVII-No%202-2016/Textile/Art.nr.182-pag.%2081-86.pdfNanofibersNanofibrous matsNanotechnologyElectrospinningFunctionalization
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author KESKIN Reyhan
GOCEK Ikilem
spellingShingle KESKIN Reyhan
GOCEK Ikilem
NANOFIBER PRODUCTION [REVIEW]
Annals of the University of Oradea: Fascicle of Textiles, Leatherwork
Nanofibers
Nanofibrous mats
Nanotechnology
Electrospinning
Functionalization
author_facet KESKIN Reyhan
GOCEK Ikilem
author_sort KESKIN Reyhan
title NANOFIBER PRODUCTION [REVIEW]
title_short NANOFIBER PRODUCTION [REVIEW]
title_full NANOFIBER PRODUCTION [REVIEW]
title_fullStr NANOFIBER PRODUCTION [REVIEW]
title_full_unstemmed NANOFIBER PRODUCTION [REVIEW]
title_sort nanofiber production [review]
publisher Editura Universităţii din Oradea
series Annals of the University of Oradea: Fascicle of Textiles, Leatherwork
issn 1843-813X
publishDate 2016-05-01
description Nanofibers are very thin fibers having diameters lower than 100 nm and their lengths might be as long as possible within production limits. The large surface area of nanofibers gives opportunity to functionalize them. Nanofibers have several applications including both applications for industrial production in many sectors and for research studies. Nanofibers find applications in energy devices such as solar cells, fuel cells and nanogenarators; in filtration applications (such as water/oil filtration, fine particle filtration, aerosol filtration, air filtration, nanoparticle filtration) and in several medical applications including antibacterial efficacy, wound healing, drug delivery and scaffolds for tissue engineering. There are several methods to produce nanofibers: Electrospinning, self assembly, phase separation, bacterial cellulose, templating, drawing, extraction, vapor-phase polymerization, kinetically controlled solution synthesis, conventional chemical polymerization for anyline. Electrospinning is the most widely used method to produce nanofibers.In electrospinning, a high electric field, which is in kilovolts, is applied to a polymer solution. The polymer solution is drawn from a syringe to a collector surface.Electrospinning requires usage of appropriate solvent, removal of evaporating solvent, an adequate power supply to overcome the viscosity and surface tension of the polymer solution; while, jet instability and jet control remain as challenges in electrospinning. Nanofiber production methods possess some disadvantages as: higher cost compared to conventional fiber production methods, health hazards such as inhale risk of nanofibers during production and keeping the environment safe from evaporating solvents used during nanofiber production. Up to date, many researches have been conducted on nanofibers and electrospinning; still, more controllable, more cost effective, more environmentally friendly and safer methods are of essential importance to future applications of nanofibers.
topic Nanofibers
Nanofibrous mats
Nanotechnology
Electrospinning
Functionalization
url http://textile.webhost.uoradea.ro/Annals/Vol%20XVII-No%202-2016/Textile/Art.nr.182-pag.%2081-86.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT keskinreyhan nanofiberproductionreview
AT gocekikilem nanofiberproductionreview
_version_ 1725824450346090496