Abstract

AbstractPurification of pathogenic air has become an essential part of infection prevention and control. Most present air filters can hardly achieve excellent air filtration performance and the effective inactivation of the airborne pathogens at the same time. Herein, a bottom‐up approach is reported upon to construct cage‐like structured superflexible nanofibrous aerogels (CSAs) with renewable antimicrobial properties by combining electrospun silica nanofibers, bacterial cellulose nanofibers, and the hydrophobic SiOSi elastic binder. The following efficient grafting of N‐halamine compounds endows the CSAs with biocidal function. The resultant aerogels exhibit intriguing features of high porosity, hydrophobicity, superelasticity, foldability, renewable chlorination ability (>5400 ppm), high filtration performance toward PM0.3 (>99.97%, 189 Pa), and excellent antibacterial and antiviral activity (6 logs reduction within 5 min contact), enabling the aerogels to intercept and inactivate the pathogenic contaminants in air. The successful synthesis of CSAs provides a new possibility to design high‐performance air filtration materials for public health protection.

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