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Bioelectret poly(lactic acid) membranes with simultaneously enhanced physical interception and electrostatic adsorption of airborne PM0.3

Journal of Hazardous Materials 2023 45 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 60 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Xinjian He, Shang Han, Keke Xu, Keke Xu, Tian Li, Haoran Yang, Tian Li, Jiefeng Gao, Jintuo Zhu, Shihang Li, Shihang Li, Jintuo Zhu, Xinjian He, Jintuo Zhu, Xinjian He, Shenghui Zhang, Huan Xu Shenghui Zhang, Shihang Li, Huan Xu Baolong Shen, Huan Xu Shenghui Zhang, Huan Xu

Summary

Researchers developed a biodegradable air filter membrane made from poly(lactic acid) that can capture ultra-fine airborne particles as small as 0.3 micrometers with high efficiency. Unlike traditional plastic-based filters that shed microplastics into the air, this plant-derived material breaks down naturally. This technology could help reduce both airborne particulate exposure and the microplastic pollution created by conventional air filtration products.

Polymers

Traditional polymeric fibrous membranes have been extensively used to reduce the health risks caused by airborne particulate matter (PM), leading to the dramatically increasing pollution of plastics and microplastics. Although great efforts have been made to develop poly(lactic acid) (PLA)-based membrane filters, they are frequently dwarfed by their relatively poor electret properties and electrostatic adsorptive mechanisms. To resolve this dilemma, a bioelectret approach was proposed in this work, strategically involving the bioinspired adhesion of dielectric hydroxyapatite nanowhiskers as a biodegradable electret to promote the polarization properties of PLA microfibrous membranes. In addition to significant improvements in tensile properties, the incorporation of hydroxyapatite bioelectret (HABE) enabled remarkable increase in the removal efficiencies of ultrafine PM in a high-voltage electrostatic field (10 and 25 kV). This was exemplified by the largely increased filtering performance (69.75%, 23.1 Pa) for PLA membranes loaded with 10 wt% HABE at the normal airflow rate (32 L/min) compared to the pristine PLA counterpart (32.89%, 7.2 Pa). Although the filtration efficiency of PM for the counterpart dramatically decreased to 21.6% at 85 L/min, the increment was maintained at nearly 196% for the bioelectret PLA, while an ultralow pressure drop (74.5 Pa) and high humidity resistance (RH 80%) were achieved. The unusual property combination were ascribed to the HABE-enabled realization of multiple filtration mechanisms, including the simultaneous enhancement of physical interception and electrostatic adsorption. The significant filtration applications, unattainable with conventional electret membranes, demonstrate the bioelectret PLA as a promising biodegradable platform that allows high filtration properties and humidity resistance.

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