Solution electrospinning of particle-polymer composite fibres

Electrospinning is a fast, simple way to produce nano/microfibers, resulting in porous mats with a high surface to volume ratio. Another material with high surface to volume ratio is aerogel. A drawback of aerogels is its inherent mechanical weakness. To counteract this, aerogels can be embedded int...

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Main Authors: Christiansen Lasse, Fojan Peter
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2016-01-01
Series:Manufacturing Review
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/mfreview/2016013
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spelling doaj-f6a10506b88142ca8d18da91350d86512020-11-24T22:09:30ZengEDP SciencesManufacturing Review2265-42242016-01-0132110.1051/mfreview/2016013mfreview160007Solution electrospinning of particle-polymer composite fibresChristiansen LasseFojan PeterElectrospinning is a fast, simple way to produce nano/microfibers, resulting in porous mats with a high surface to volume ratio. Another material with high surface to volume ratio is aerogel. A drawback of aerogels is its inherent mechanical weakness. To counteract this, aerogels can be embedded into scaffolds. The formation of a particle/polymer composite results in improved mechanical stability, without compromising the porosity. In the presented study, aerogel and poly(ethylene oxide) are mixed into a solution, and spun to thin fibres. Thereby a porous membrane, on the micro- and nano-scale, is produced. The maximum polymer-silica weight-ratio yielding stable fibres has also been determined. The morphology of the fibres at different weight ratios has been investigated by optical microscopy and scanning electron microscope (SEM). Low aerogel concentrations yield few particles located in polymer fibres, whereas higher amounts resulted in fibres dominated by the aerogel particle diameters. The diameters of these fibres were in the range between 13 um to 41 um. The flowrate dependence of the fibre diameter was evaluated for polymer solutions with high particle contents. The self-supporting abilities of these fibres are discussed. It is concluded that selfsupporting polymer/aerogel composites can be made by electrospinning.http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/mfreview/2016013ElectrospinningComposite fibresPoly(ethylene oxide)Aerogel particles
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Christiansen Lasse
Fojan Peter
spellingShingle Christiansen Lasse
Fojan Peter
Solution electrospinning of particle-polymer composite fibres
Manufacturing Review
Electrospinning
Composite fibres
Poly(ethylene oxide)
Aerogel particles
author_facet Christiansen Lasse
Fojan Peter
author_sort Christiansen Lasse
title Solution electrospinning of particle-polymer composite fibres
title_short Solution electrospinning of particle-polymer composite fibres
title_full Solution electrospinning of particle-polymer composite fibres
title_fullStr Solution electrospinning of particle-polymer composite fibres
title_full_unstemmed Solution electrospinning of particle-polymer composite fibres
title_sort solution electrospinning of particle-polymer composite fibres
publisher EDP Sciences
series Manufacturing Review
issn 2265-4224
publishDate 2016-01-01
description Electrospinning is a fast, simple way to produce nano/microfibers, resulting in porous mats with a high surface to volume ratio. Another material with high surface to volume ratio is aerogel. A drawback of aerogels is its inherent mechanical weakness. To counteract this, aerogels can be embedded into scaffolds. The formation of a particle/polymer composite results in improved mechanical stability, without compromising the porosity. In the presented study, aerogel and poly(ethylene oxide) are mixed into a solution, and spun to thin fibres. Thereby a porous membrane, on the micro- and nano-scale, is produced. The maximum polymer-silica weight-ratio yielding stable fibres has also been determined. The morphology of the fibres at different weight ratios has been investigated by optical microscopy and scanning electron microscope (SEM). Low aerogel concentrations yield few particles located in polymer fibres, whereas higher amounts resulted in fibres dominated by the aerogel particle diameters. The diameters of these fibres were in the range between 13 um to 41 um. The flowrate dependence of the fibre diameter was evaluated for polymer solutions with high particle contents. The self-supporting abilities of these fibres are discussed. It is concluded that selfsupporting polymer/aerogel composites can be made by electrospinning.
topic Electrospinning
Composite fibres
Poly(ethylene oxide)
Aerogel particles
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/mfreview/2016013
work_keys_str_mv AT christiansenlasse solutionelectrospinningofparticlepolymercompositefibres
AT fojanpeter solutionelectrospinningofparticlepolymercompositefibres
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