4.7 Article

Co-existing spear-and-shield air filter: Anchoring proteinaceous pathogen and self-sterilized nanocoating for combating viral pandemic

Journal

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING JOURNAL
Volume 426, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.cej.2021.130763

Keywords

Laponite; Copper ion; SARS-CoV-2; Protein-trapping performance; Antibacterial; Filter

Funding

  1. Basic Science Research Program through the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) - Ministry of Science and ICT [NRF-2017R1E1A1A01074343]
  2. Korea Environment Industry & Technology Institute (KEITI) through Ecological Imitation-based Environmental Pollution Management Technology Development Project - Korea Ministry of Environment (MOE) [2019002790001]
  3. Agency for Defense Development [912762101]

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Infectious bioaerosols pose a threat to public health, especially in indoor environments where airborne transmission can occur. Personal protective equipment or indoor air purification is necessary to prevent infection spread. A unique nanocoating fabric, utilizing LAP and Cu2+ ions, demonstrates both pathogen trapping and antibacterial properties, making it effective for air filtration during the current viral pandemic.
Infectious pollutants bioaerosols can threaten human public health. In particular, the indoor environment provides a unique exposure situation to induce infection through airborne transmission like SARS-CoV-2. To prevent the infection from spreading, personal protective equipment or indoor air purification is necessary. However, it has been discovered that the conventional filter can become contaminated by pathogen-containing aerosols, meaning that advanced filtering and self-sterilization systems are required. Here, we fabricate a multilayered nanocoating around the fabric using laponite (LAP) with Cu2+ ions (LAP-Cu2+ nanocoating) two contradictory functions in one system: trapping proteinaceous pathogens and antibacterial effect. Due to the strong LAP-protein interaction, albumin and spike protein (S-protein) are trapped into the fabric when proteins are sprayed using a nebulizer. The protein-blocking performance of the nanocoated fabric is 9.55-fold higher than bare fabric. These trapping capacities are retained after rinsing and repeated adsorption cycles, showing reproducibility for air filtration. Even though the protein-binding occurred, the LAP-Cu2+ fabric indicates antibacterial effect. LAP-Cu2+ fabric has an equivalent air and water transmittance rate to that of bare fabric with a stability under physiological environment. Therefore, given its excellent Spear-and-shield functions, the proposed LAP-Cu2+ fabric shows great potential for use in filter and masks during the viral pandemic.

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