HEALTH Home made 3 layer masks made of Silk or Chiffon and Cotton very effective to filter out aerosols, if tight to face.

ainitfunny

Saved, to glorify God.
Researchers report in ACS Nano that a combination of cotton with natural silk or chiffon can effectively filter out aerosol particles -- if the fit is good.



In the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends that people wear masks in public. Because N95 and surgical masks are scarce and should be reserved for health care workers, many people are making their own coverings. Now, researchers report in ACS Nano that a combination of cotton with natural silk or chiffon can effectively filter out aerosol particles -- if the fit is good.

SARS-CoV-2, the new coronavirus that causes COVID-19, is thought to spread mainly through respiratory droplets when an infected person coughs, sneezes, speaks or breathes. These droplets form in a wide range of sizes, but the tiniest ones, called aerosols, can easily slip through the openings between certain cloth fibers, leading some people to question whether cloth masks can actually help prevent disease.

Therefore, Supratik Guha at the University of Chicago and colleagues wanted to study the ability of common fabrics, alone or in combination, to filter out aerosols similar in size to respiratory droplets.

The researchers used an aerosol mixing chamber to produce particles ranging from 10 nm to 6 μm in diameter. A fan blew the aerosol across various cloth samples at an airflow rate corresponding to a person's respiration at rest, and the team measured the number and size of particles in air before and after passing through the fabric.

One layer of a tightly woven cotton sheet combined with two layers of polyester-spandex chiffon -- a sheer fabric often used in evening gowns -- filtered out the most aerosol particles (80-99%, depending on particle size), with performance close to that of an N95 mask material. Substituting the chiffon with natural silk or flannel, or simply using a cotton quilt with cotton-polyester batting, produced similar results.

The researchers point out that tightly woven fabrics, such as cotton, can act as a mechanical barrier to particles, whereas fabrics that hold a static charge, like certain types of chiffon and natural silk, serve as an electrostatic barrier. However, a 1% gap reduced the filtering efficiency of all masks by half or more, emphasizing the importance of a properly fitted mask. (Mask MUST be tight to the face in order to work.)

The authors acknowledge use of the U.S. Department of Energy's Center for Nanoscale Materials user facility at Argonne National Laboratory and funding from the U.S. Department of Defense's Vannevar Bush Fellowship.





Story Source:

Materials provided by American Chemical Society. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.
 

Old Gray Mare

TB Fanatic
There are also fluid resistant NIOSH N95 masks that have been around for years. They have been used in surgical settings where bodily fluids have been know to go airborne.
 

Squid

Veteran Member
Early buried in the massive Corona thread was a discussion also occurring on Youtube was what was the best alternate materials to make masks that filtered at or close to the 95% that is the level of the N95 mask.
I seem to remember a cloth material for comfort with a layer of the blue shop wipe material was pretty effective at filtering the smaller particulates that the N95 mask.

Its funny how these same topics keep coming up over and over.
 

The Cub

Behold, I am coming soon.
Do people in labs working on coronaviruses wear the full suit?

I can not say for sure.....only that I have read articles on the Wuhan Virus and Wuhan lab....and the articles included pics of people in hazmat type suits.

How bout the dude in the plastic in the pic above? :lkick:
 

ShadowMan

Designated Grumpy Old Fart
Not taking any chances with the WuFlu Pandemic

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TammyinWI

Talk is cheap
Didnt the Chinese people wear masks before the virus ?

Yeah, because of the smog/pollution in the big cities. Commie regs are probably very few for air standards.

Like someone else pointed out here on the board: if this dang virus is so catchy and dangerous, how come there are no bio-hazard containers for used masks to be placed in?
 
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Ractivist

Pride comes before the fall.....Pride month ended.
Got a buddy who is a self taught scientist of sorts. He used an electron microscope and took pictures of a basic cotton dress shirts fabric weave. He measured the openings in the weave. He then compared the size of the opening with a single viron. Then he put a word picture together to put it into perspective. If a single viron was the size of a mosquito, the opening in the weave would be 200 feet wide and tall. Masks do not help. A viron is smaller than DNA.

Hence the reason for pressurized rubber suits.
 
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