Logo image
Physical stabilisation of electrospun poly(vinyl alcohol) nanofibres: comparative study on methanol and heat-based crosslinking
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Physical stabilisation of electrospun poly(vinyl alcohol) nanofibres: comparative study on methanol and heat-based crosslinking

Mohsen Miraftab, Abu Naser Saifullah and Ahmet Çay
Journal of Material Science, Vol.50(4), pp.1943-1957
2015

Abstract

Antimicrobial agents Bacteria Biological materials Biomaterials Functional polymers Materials Microorganisms Natural polymers Strength of materials Textiles Anti-microbial activity Fibrous material Gelling properties Medical textiles Methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus Polymer formation strength Wound dressings Silver Technology
Methanol crosslinking and heat-treatment methods for physical crosslinking of electrospun poly(vinyl alcohol) (PVA) nanofibres were investigated to assess their stability in water. For this purpose, PVAs with low and high molecular weights were selected. Morphology of the crosslinked membranes was characterised by scanning electron microscopy. Crystallinity of the resultant crosslinked fibres were analysed by FT-IR and differential scanning calorimetry. It has been shown that physical crosslinking increases the crystallinity of the fibres. High molecular weight PVA nanofibres showed better stability and better preservation of nanofibrous structure. Stability of the crosslinked membranes was also tested by immersion into water at room temperature and boiling water. Combined methanol and heat treatments at different temperatures and exposure periods were also investigated. Treatment at 180°C HMW PVA nanofibres for longer durations exhibited best results in terms of water stability, although it exhibited somewhat lower swelling ratios as compared to those subjected to only methanol treatment.
url
Link to Published VersionView
Published (Version of record)Publisher sites may require subscription to read content

Metrics

11 Record Views
109 Times Cited - Scopus

Details

Logo image

Usage Policy