posted on 2021-05-14, 17:35authored byHongchen Shen, Zhe Zhou, Haihuan Wang, Mengyang Zhang, Minghao Han, David P. Durkin, Danmeng Shuai, Yun Shen
Airborne
transmission of SARS-CoV-2 plays a critical role in spreading
COVID-19. To protect public health, we designed and fabricated electrospun
nanofibrous air filters that hold promise for applications in personal
protective equipment (PPE) and the indoor environment. Due to ultrafine
nanofibers (∼300 nm), the electrospun air filters had a much
smaller pore size in comparison to the surgical mask and cloth masks
(a couple of micrometers versus tens to hundreds of micrometers).
A coronavirus strain served as a SARS-CoV-2 surrogate and was used
to generate aerosols for filtration efficiency tests, which can better
represent SARS-CoV-2 in comparison to other agents used for aerosol
generation in previous studies. The electrospun air filters showed
excellent performance by capturing up to 99.9% of coronavirus aerosols,
which outperformed many commercial face masks. In addition, we observed
that the same electrospun air filter or face mask removed NaCl aerosols
equivalently or less effectively in comparison to the coronavirus
aerosols when both aerosols were generated from the same system. Our
work paves a new avenue for advancing air filtration by developing
electrospun nanofibrous air filters for controlling SARS-CoV-2 airborne
transmission.