4.7 Article

Electrospinning Nanofiber Mats with Magnetite Nanoparticles Using Various Needle-Based Techniques

Journal

POLYMERS
Volume 14, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/polym14030533

Keywords

freestanding nanofiber mats; magnetic nanoparticles; needle-based electrospinning; coaxial spinning; dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA); atomic force microscopy (AFM); scanning electron microscopy (SEM)

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This paper presents a method for producing nanofiber mats containing different nanoparticles using electrospinning technique. Poly (acrylonitrile) (PAN) composite nanofiber mats with 50 wt% magnetite nanoparticles were electrospun and analyzed using SEM, AFM, EDS, and DMA. The results show that as the number of nanoparticles increases, the morphology and mechanical properties of the nanofiber mats decrease.
Electrospinning can be used to produce nanofiber mats containing diverse nanoparticles for various purposes. Magnetic nanoparticles, such as magnetite (Fe3O4), can be introduced to produce magnetic nanofiber mats, e.g., for hyperthermia applications, but also for basic research of diluted magnetic systems. As the number of nanoparticles increases, however, the morphology and the mechanical properties of the nanofiber mats decrease, so that freestanding composite nanofiber mats with a high content of nanoparticles are hard to produce. Here we report on poly (acrylonitrile) (PAN) composite nanofiber mats, electrospun by a needle-based system, containing 50 wt% magnetite nanoparticles overall or in the shell of core-shell fibers, collected on a flat or a rotating collector. While the first nanofiber mats show an irregular morphology, the latter are quite regular and contain straight fibers without many beads or agglomerations. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and atomic force microscopy (AFM) reveal agglomerations around the pure composite nanofibers and even, round core-shell fibers, the latter showing slightly increased fiber diameters. Energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDS) shows a regular distribution of the embedded magnetic nanoparticles. Dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA) reveals that mechanical properties are reduced as compared to nanofiber mats with smaller amounts of magnetic nanoparticles, but mats with 50 wt% magnetite are still freestanding.

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