Publication | Closed Access
Developing protective textile materials as barriers to liquid penetration using melt‐electrospinning
222
Citations
10
References
2006
Year
EngineeringTechnical TextileMechanical EngineeringFiber SciencePolymer ProcessingPolymer ChemistryProtective Textile MaterialsMaterials ScienceTextile TestingSurface TensionFiber ChemistryElectrospun Polypropylene WebsTextile FibreNanofiberTextile EngineeringTextile SciencePolymer ScienceTextile DevelopmentWater Vapor Transmission
The study develops melt‑electrospun polypropylene fiber webs and laminates as an alternative protective textile for agricultural workers. Polypropylene webs were fabricated in two thicknesses, laminated onto nonwoven substrates, and evaluated for barrier, air permeability, and water‑vapor transmission against pesticide mixtures of varying surface tension and viscosity. Penetration tests show the webs provide excellent barrier performance, with laminated fabrics achieving 90–100% protection across surface tensions; lamination reduces air permeability by ~20% and water‑vapor transmission by up to 12%, yet still exceeds most current protective clothing materials. © 2006 Wiley Periodicals, Inc., J Appl Polym Sci 102: 3430–3437.
Abstract Electrospun polypropylene fiber webs and laminates were developed using melt‐electrospinning, to explore an alternative way of manufacturing protective clothing materials for agricultural workers. Electrospun polypropylene webs were fabricated in two levels of thickness. To examine the effect of lamination on the protection/thermal comfort properties, the webs were laminated on nonwoven fabric substrates. Barrier performance was evaluated for the electrospun webs and laminates, using two pesticide mixtures that represent a range of surface tension and viscosity. Effects of web thickness and lamination on air permeability and water vapor transmission were assessed as indications of thermal comfort performance. Penetration testing shows that electrospun polypropylene webs provide excellent barrier performance against the high surface tension challenge liquid, whereas the laminated fabrics of electrospun polypropylene webs exhibited performance of 90–100% for challenge liquids with varying surface tension. Air permeability of electrospun polypropylene webs decreased by ∼20% because of the lamination and web thickness, but was still higher than most of the materials currently in use for protective clothing. Water vapor transmission of electrospun polypropylene webs reduced by up to 12% from the lamination and web thickness as well, but was still in a range comparable to woven work clothing fabrics. © 2006 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Appl Polym Sci 102: 3430–3437, 2006
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1