Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 11 de 11
Filter
Add more filters










Publication year range
2.
Polymers (Basel) ; 15(13)2023 Jul 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37447581

ABSTRACT

The COVID-19 pandemic led to a huge demand for disposable facemasks. Billions were manufactured from nonbiodegradable petroleum-derived polymers, and many were discarded in the environment where they contributed to plastic pollution. There is an urgent need for biobased and biodegradable facemasks to avoid environmental harm during future disease outbreaks. Melt electrospinning is a promising alternative technique for the manufacturing of filter layers using sub-microfibers prepared from biobased raw materials such as polybutylene succinate (PBS). However, it is not yet possible to produce sub-micrometer PBS fibers or uniform nonwoven-like samples at the pilot scale, which hinders their investigation as filter layers. Further optimization of pilot-scale PBS melt electrospinning is therefore required. Here, we tested the effect of different parameters such as electric field strength, nozzle-to-collector distance and throughput on the final fiber diameter and sample uniformity during PBS melt electrospinning on a pilot-scale device. We also studied the effect of a climate chamber and an additional infrared heater on the solidification of PBS fibers and their final diameter and uniformity. In addition, a post-processing step, including a hot air stream of 90 °C for 30 s has been studied and successfully lead to a nonwoven-like structure including filaments that weld together without changing their structure. The finest fibers (1.7 µm in diameter) were produced at an applied electric field strength of -40 kV, a nozzle-to-collector distance of 5.5 cm, and a spin pump speed of 2 rpm. Three uniform nonwoven-like samples were tested as filter layers in a medical face mask by measuring their ability to prevent the transfer of bacteria, but the pore size was too large for effective retention. Our results provide insight into the process parameters influencing the suitability of melt-electrospun nonwoven-like samples as biobased and biodegradable filter materials and offer guidance for further process optimization.

3.
PRiMER ; 7: 20, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37465837

ABSTRACT

Objectives: We sought to assess self-care perception consistency between patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus and their physicians and characterize the psychosocial parameters influencing their respective perceptions. Methods: We conducted a study of 627 patients with type 2 diabetes and their physicians throughout 12 family medicine residency clinics in Texas to analyze their respective perceptions of patient self-care. We utilized linear regression testing. Results: There was a lack of consistency in self-care perception between patients and physicians 31.2% of the time. Patient self-care perception was best predicted by the patients' diabetes distress scores (P<.001) and last HbA1c (P<.001). Conclusion: Measuring a patient's diabetes distress may help physicians better understand a patient's self-care perception. By understanding a patient's self-care perception, the physician may be able to explore these notions of positive or negative self-care perception and even gently correct them when necessary. This may allow physicians to better align themselves with the patient, provide behavioral health interventions, and better target and communicate effective plans. Practical Implications: We suggest periodic assessment of diabetes distress and self-care perception to inform the need for education to improve self-efficacy.

4.
Polymers (Basel) ; 14(22)2022 Nov 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36433148

ABSTRACT

The color of textile fibers is typically imparted by submersion in a high-temperature dye bath. However, the treatment of the effluent is challenging and the textile industry is therefore a major source of water pollution. Current fashion trends favor biobased polymers such as polylactic acid (PLA) but exhaust dyeing at high temperatures causes hydrolytic degradation, reducing the crystallinity and tenacity of the yarn. To preserve the mechanical properties of PLA-based textiles, an alternative to exhaust dyeing called dope dyeing can be used, wherein colorants are incorporated into the polymer matrix during melt spinning. We evaluated this process by dope dyeing PLA with several colorants, then testing the thermal, physical, and mechanical properties of the yarn and the physical properties of circular-knitted fabrics. Although the colorants affected the crystallization behavior at lower cooling rates, during the melt-spinning process, the drawing speed had a greater effect on the crystallinity and mechanical properties of the dyed yarn. Scanning electron microscopy revealed that the colorants were well dispersed in the PLA matrix. We found that the colorants did not affect the physical properties of the knitted fabric. Our results can be used to develop more environmentally beneficial dope-dyed PLA yarn with improved mechanical properties.

5.
Polymers (Basel) ; 14(14)2022 Jul 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35890641

ABSTRACT

Melt electrospinning is a simple, versatile, and widely used technique for the production of microfibers and sub-microfibers. Polybutylene succinate (PBS) is a promising raw material for the preparation of melt-electrospun fibers at the laboratory scale. The inclusion of additives in the PBS melt can reduce the final fiber diameter, but economically feasible larger-scale processes remain challenging. The fiber diameter can also be reduced by machine optimization, although this is expensive due to the complexity of melt-electrospinning devices. Changes in electrical field polarity have provided a low-cost strategy to reduce the diameter of fibers produced by solution-electrospinning, but there is little information about the effect of this parameter on the final diameter of melt-electrospun fibers. We therefore determined the effect of field polarity on the diameter of melt-electrospun PBS fibers at the laboratory scale and investigated the transferability of these results to our 600-nozzle pilot-scale device. Changing the polarity achieved a significant reduction in fiber diameter of ~50% at the laboratory scale and ~30% at the pilot scale, resulting in a minimum average fiber diameter of 10.88 µm. Although the effect of field polarity on fiber diameter was similar at both scales, the fibers in the web stuck together at the laboratory scale but not at the pilot scale. We have developed an inexpensive method to reduce the diameter of melt-electrospun PBS fibers and our data provide insight into the transferability of melt electrospinning from the laboratory to a pilot-scale machine.

6.
Polymers (Basel) ; 14(15)2022 Jul 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35893953

ABSTRACT

Fibers with diameters in the lower micrometer range have unique properties suitable for applications in the textile and biomedical industries. Such fibers are usually produced by solution electrospinning, but this process is environmentally harmful because it requires the use of toxic solvents. Melt electrospinning is a sustainable alternative but the high viscosity and low electrical conductivity of molten polymers produce thicker fibers. Here, we used multifunctional biobased dyes as additives to improve the spinnability of polylactic acid (PLA), improving the spinnability by reducing the electrical resistance of the melt, and incorporating antibacterial activity against Staphylococcus aureus. Spinning trials using our 600-nozzle pilot-scale melt-electrospinning device showed that the addition of dyes produced narrower fibers in the resulting fiber web, with a minimum diameter of ~9 µm for the fiber containing 3% (w/w) of curcumin. The reduction in diameter was low at lower throughputs but more significant at higher throughputs, where the diameter reduced from 46 µm to approximately 23 µm. Although all three dyes showed antibacterial activity, only the PLA melt containing 5% (w/w) curcumin retained this property in the fiber web. Our results provide the basis for the development of environmentally friendly melt-electrospinning processes for the pilot-scale manufacturing of microfibers.

7.
Nanomaterials (Basel) ; 12(2)2022 Jan 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35055300

ABSTRACT

Melt electrospinning is a polymer processing technology for the manufacture of microfibers and nanofibers. Additives are required to reduce the melt viscosity and increase its conductivity in order to minimize the fiber diameter, and can also impart additional beneficial properties. We investigated the preparation of polybutylene succinate (PBS) microfibers incorporating different weight percentages of two multifunctional additives (the organic dye curcumin and inorganic silver nanoparticles) using a single-nozzle laboratory-scale device. We determined the influence of these additives on the polymer melt viscosity, electrical conductivity, degradation profile, thermal behavior, fiber diameter, and antibacterial activity. The formation of a Taylor cone followed by continuous fiber deposition was observed for compounds containing up to 3% (w/w) silver nanoparticles and up to 10% (w/w) curcumin, the latter achieving the minimum average fiber diameter of 12.57 µm. Both additives reduced the viscosity and increased the electrical conductivity of the PBS melt, and also retained their specific antibacterial properties when compounded and spun into fibers. This is the first report describing the effect of curcumin and silver nanoparticles on the properties of PBS fibers manufactured using a single-nozzle melt-electrospinning device. Our results provide the basis to develop environmentally benign antibacterial melt-electrospun PBS fibers for biomedical applications.

8.
Polymers (Basel) ; 13(7)2021 Mar 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33810218

ABSTRACT

Melt electrospinning is widely used to manufacture fibers with diameters in the low micrometer range. Such fibers are suitable for many biomedical applications, including sutures, stents and tissue engineering. We investigated the preparation of polybutylene succinate microfibers using a single-nozzle laboratory-scale device, while varying the electric field strength, process throughput, nozzle-to-collector distance and the temperature of the polymer melt. The formation of a Taylor cone followed by continuous fiber deposition was observed for all process parameters, but whipping behavior was enhanced when the electric field strength was increased from 50 to 60 kV. The narrowest fibers (30.05 µm) were produced using the following parameters: electric field strength 60 kV, melt temperature 235 °C, throughput 0.1 mL/min and nozzle-to-collector distance 10 cm. Statistical analysis confirmed that the electric field strength was the most important parameter controlling the average fiber diameter. We therefore report the first production of melt-electrospun polybutylene succinate fibers in the low micrometer range using a laboratory-scale device. This offers an economical and environmentally sustainable alternative to conventional solution electrospinning for the preparation of safe fibers in the micrometer range suitable for biomedical applications.

9.
Langmuir ; 37(4): 1446-1455, 2021 02 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33470824

ABSTRACT

The demand is rising for colorants that are obtained from natural resources, tolerant to industrial processing methods, and meet color quality demands. Herein, we report how relevant properties such as thermal stability and photostability of the natural colorant alizarin can be improved by grafting it onto ZnO nanoparticles (NPs), allowing application in a warm extrusion process for the fabrication of polyamide fibers. For this study, ZnO NPs (diameter 2.0 ± 0.6 nm) were synthesized and subsequently functionalized with alizarin. The alizarin-coated ZnO NPs (i.e., dyed nanoparticles, DNPs) were characterized. Thermogravimetric analysis and ultraviolet-visible (UV-vis) studies revealed that alizarin coating accounts for ∼65% (w/w) of the total mass of the DNPs. A subsequent detailed characterization with Fourier transform infrared (FT-IR), 1H nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), 13C cross-polarization magic angle spinning (CP-MAS) NMR, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), and quantum chemistry studies using various density functional theory (DFT) functionals and basis sets indicated that binding onto the ZnO NPs occurred predominantly via the catechol moiety of alizarin. Importantly, this grafting increased the thermal stability of alizarin with >100 °C, which allowed the processing of the DNPs into polyamide fibers by warm extrusion at 260 °C. Evaluation of the lightfastness of the DNP-dyed nylon fibers revealed that the changes in color quantified via the distance metric ΔE* of alizarin when embedded in a hybrid material were 2.6-fold better compared to nylon fibers that were directly dyed with alizarin. This reveals that the process of immobilization of a natural dye onto ZnO nanoparticles indeed improves the dye properties significantly and opens the way for a wide range of further studies into surface-immobilized dyes.

10.
Materials (Basel) ; 13(5)2020 Feb 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32120806

ABSTRACT

Electrospinning is widely used for the manufacture of fibers in the low-micrometer to nanometer range, allowing the fabrication of flexible materials with a high surface area. A distinction is made between solution and melt electrospinning. The former produces thinner fibers but requires hazardous solvents; whereas the latter is more environmentally sustainable because solvents are not required. However, the viscous melt requires high process temperatures and its low conductivity leads to thicker fibers. Here, we describe the first use of the biobased dyes alizarin; hematoxylin and quercetin as conductive additives to reduce the diameter of polylactic acid (PLA) fibers produced by melt electrospinning; combined with a biobased plasticizer to reduce the melt viscosity. The formation of a Taylor cone followed by continuous fiber deposition was observed for all PLA compounds; reducing the fiber diameter by up to 77% compared to pure PLA. The smallest average fiber diameter of 16.04 µm was achieved by adding 2% (w/w) hematoxylin. Comparative analysis revealed that the melt-electrospun fibers had a low degree of crystallinity compared to drawn filament controls-resembling partially oriented filaments. Our results form the basis of an economical and environmentally friendly process that could ultimately, provide an alternative to industrial solution electrospinning.

11.
J Pharm Bioallied Sci ; 11(Suppl 2): S485-S487, 2019 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31198392

ABSTRACT

Maxillary canines are usually found to be the single-rooted, single-canaled teeth1. Two roots with two root canals are a very rare condition2. Here we report a rare case of anatomic variation of permanent maxillary canine with three roots and three root canals which is first of its kind in the literature.

SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...