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Electrospinning of continuous nanofiber bundles and twisted nanofiber yarns

chapter
posted on 2011-01-01, 00:00 authored by Usman Ali, Yaqiong Zhou, Xungai Wang, Tong Lin
Spinning is a prehistoric technology in which endless filaments, shorter fibers or twisted fibers are put together to produce yarns that serve as key element to assemble multifarious structural designs for diverse functions. Electrospinning has been regarded as the most effective and versatile technology to produce nanofibers with controlled fiber morphology, dimension and functional components from various polymeric materials (Dersch et al., 2007, Frenot and Chronakis, 2003, Schreuder-Gibson et al., 2002). However, most electrospun fibers are produced in the form of randomly-oriented nonwoven fiber mats (Doshi and Reneker, 1995, Madhavamoorthi, 2005). The relatively low mechanical strength and difficulty in tailoring the fibrous structure have restricted their applications. With the rapid development in nanoscience and nanotechnology, yarns composed of nanofibers may uncover new opportunities for development of well-defined three dimensional nano fibrous architectures. This chapter focuses on recent research and advancement in electrospinning of nanofiber bundles and nanofiber yarns. The preparation, morphology, mechanical properties and potential applications of these fibrous materials are discussed in details.

History

Title of book

Nanofibers - production, properties and functional applications

Chapter number

8

Pagination

153 - 174

Publisher

InTech

Place of publication

Rijeka, Croatia

ISBN-13

9789533074207

Language

eng

Publication classification

B2 Book chapter in non-commercially published book

Copyright notice

2011, InTech

Extent

31

Editor/Contributor(s)

T Lin