TY - JOUR
T1 - Bimodal Nanofiber and Microfiber Nonwovens by Melt-Blowing Immiscible Ternary Polymer Blends
AU - Jin, Kailong
AU - Eyer, Sarah
AU - Dean, William
AU - Kitto, David
AU - Bates, Frank S.
AU - Ellison, Christopher J.
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors gratefully thank Cummins Filtration for financial support. The authors also thank Prof. Christopher W. Macosko for helpful discussions. Parts of this work were performed at the Characterization Facility, University of Minnesota, which receives partial support from NSF through the MRSEC program.
Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2019 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2020/3/25
Y1 - 2020/3/25
N2 - Most nonwoven fiber mats are produced with a uniform, narrow fiber diameter distribution. However, building evidence suggests that a bimodal diameter distribution (i.e., comprised of two populations of fibers, one with a smaller average diameter (dav), d, and the other with a larger dav, D, where D ≥ 5d), has certain advantages in applications such as filtration media. To the best of our knowledge, all previous reports describing production of bimodal fiber diameter distributions have relied on solution-based electrospinning, a much less common fiber-spinning technique, compared to melt blowing, which currently produces more than 10% of nonwovens globally (an approximately $50 billion market). In this study, we demonstrate a facile method for producing bimodal fiber diameter distributions by melt blowing immiscible ternary polymer blends, with the two minority blend components being randomly dispersed as isolated, bimodally sized particles within the continuous matrix. Such a ternary blend can be obtained by selecting a matrix phase that preferentially wets/encapsulates both dispersed phases having vastly different viscosity ratios. Specifically, two model immiscible ternary blends comprised of polystyrene/polyethylene/Nylon-6 (PS/PE/Nylon) and poly(ethylene oxide)/polyethylene/Nylon-6 (PEO/PE/Nylon) with the desired morphologies and PS or PEO as the matrix were examined. During melt blowing of the blends, the PE minority domains (∼8 μm in diameter) and Nylon minority domains (∼70 μm in diameter) dispersed within the matrix were transformed to PE nanofibers (dav ≈ 560 nm) and Nylon microfibers (dav ≈ 8 μm) embedded in the elongated PS matrix fibers, and similarly for fibers made with a PEO matrix. Subsequent removal of the matrix polymer with an appropriate solvent (tetrahydrofuran for PS or water for PEO) produced a macroscopic mat of randomly distributed, bimodal nanofibers and microfibers. The nanofiber and microfiber compositions of the bimodal-diameter fiber mats were effectively tuned by varying the composition of the minority components of the original ternary polymer blends. Interestingly, the resulting bimodal-diameter fiber mats possessed few nanofiber bundles; we hypothesize that this is due to the presence of Nylon microfibers that are intrinsically intermixed among the PE nanofibers that physically restrict the formation of nanofiber bundles. Overall, this versatile method could provide a high-throughput route to scalable quantities of fiber mats with a bimodal distribution of fiber diameters, thus promoting the application of hierarchically structured nonwovens.
AB - Most nonwoven fiber mats are produced with a uniform, narrow fiber diameter distribution. However, building evidence suggests that a bimodal diameter distribution (i.e., comprised of two populations of fibers, one with a smaller average diameter (dav), d, and the other with a larger dav, D, where D ≥ 5d), has certain advantages in applications such as filtration media. To the best of our knowledge, all previous reports describing production of bimodal fiber diameter distributions have relied on solution-based electrospinning, a much less common fiber-spinning technique, compared to melt blowing, which currently produces more than 10% of nonwovens globally (an approximately $50 billion market). In this study, we demonstrate a facile method for producing bimodal fiber diameter distributions by melt blowing immiscible ternary polymer blends, with the two minority blend components being randomly dispersed as isolated, bimodally sized particles within the continuous matrix. Such a ternary blend can be obtained by selecting a matrix phase that preferentially wets/encapsulates both dispersed phases having vastly different viscosity ratios. Specifically, two model immiscible ternary blends comprised of polystyrene/polyethylene/Nylon-6 (PS/PE/Nylon) and poly(ethylene oxide)/polyethylene/Nylon-6 (PEO/PE/Nylon) with the desired morphologies and PS or PEO as the matrix were examined. During melt blowing of the blends, the PE minority domains (∼8 μm in diameter) and Nylon minority domains (∼70 μm in diameter) dispersed within the matrix were transformed to PE nanofibers (dav ≈ 560 nm) and Nylon microfibers (dav ≈ 8 μm) embedded in the elongated PS matrix fibers, and similarly for fibers made with a PEO matrix. Subsequent removal of the matrix polymer with an appropriate solvent (tetrahydrofuran for PS or water for PEO) produced a macroscopic mat of randomly distributed, bimodal nanofibers and microfibers. The nanofiber and microfiber compositions of the bimodal-diameter fiber mats were effectively tuned by varying the composition of the minority components of the original ternary polymer blends. Interestingly, the resulting bimodal-diameter fiber mats possessed few nanofiber bundles; we hypothesize that this is due to the presence of Nylon microfibers that are intrinsically intermixed among the PE nanofibers that physically restrict the formation of nanofiber bundles. Overall, this versatile method could provide a high-throughput route to scalable quantities of fiber mats with a bimodal distribution of fiber diameters, thus promoting the application of hierarchically structured nonwovens.
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U2 - 10.1021/acs.iecr.9b04887
DO - 10.1021/acs.iecr.9b04887
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85074612399
SN - 0888-5885
VL - 59
SP - 5238
EP - 5246
JO - Industrial and Engineering Chemistry Research
JF - Industrial and Engineering Chemistry Research
IS - 12
ER -