Microscopy of Woven and Nonwoven Face Covering Materials: Implications for Particle Filtration

MICROSCOPY AND MICROANALYSIS(2024)

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摘要
A suite of natural, synthetic, and mixed synthetic-natural woven fabrics, along with nonwoven filtration layers from a surgical mask and an N95 respirator, was examined using visible light microscopy, scanning electron microscopy, and micro-X-ray computed tomography (mu XCT) to determine the fiber diameter distribution, fabric thickness, and the volume of solid space of the fabrics. Nonwoven materials exhibit a positively skewed distribution of fiber diameters with a mean value of approximate to 3 mu m, whereas woven fabrics exhibit a normal distribution of diameters with mean values roughly five times larger (>15 mu m). The mean thickness of the N95 filtration material is 1093 mu m and is greater than that of the woven fabrics that span from 420 to 650 mu m. A new procedure for measuring the thickness of flannel fabrics is proposed that accounts for raised fibers. mu XCT allowed for a quantitative nondestructive approach to measure fabric porosity as well as the surface area/volume. Cotton flannel showed the largest mean isotropy of any fabric, though fiber order within the weave is poorly represented in the surface electron images. Surface fabric isotropy and surface area/volume ratios are proposed as useful microstructural quantities to consider for future particle filtration modeling efforts of woven materials.
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关键词
aerosols,cloth masks,COVID-19,fabric,filtration,infectious diseases,microstructure,N95,source control,textiles
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