Abstract

Two different electrospinning processes (traditional single fluid one and a modified coaxial electrospinning with organic solvent as sheath fluid) are investigated in relation to their capability of producing thinner nanofibers. Both the modified coaxial electrospinning and single fluid electrospinning can produce thinner nanofibers with polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) as a polymer model and using a poor volatile solvent N, N-dimethylacetamide (DMAc) in different ways. However the traditional single fluid process was less effective compared to the modified coaxial process, as it suffered more from the limitation of polymer chain entanglement threshold for maintaining structural uniformity of nanofibers. Using DMAc as sheath fluid in the modified process facilitated formation of thinner nanofibers without sacrificing their quality. The mechanism should be that an appropriate DMAc surrounding to the core polymer jet helps to retain it in a fluid state to experience a longer time electrical drawing, with little adverse influence on the polymer chain entanglements. Nanofiber diameters could also be tailored in a linear manner using the modified coaxial process simply through manipulating the sheath solvent flow rates. The modified coaxial process described here extends the capability of electrospinning process and opens a new way to obtain thinner nanofibers with fine structural uniformity.

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