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Abstract
Electrospinning is a highly versatile method to process solutions or melts, mainly
of polymers, into continuous fibers with diameters ranging from a few micrometers
to a few nanometers. This technique is applicable to virtually every soluble or fusible
polymer. The polymers can be chemically modified and can also be tailored with additives
ranging from simple carbon-black particles to complex species such as enzymes, viruses,
and bacteria. Electrospinning appears to be straightforward, but is a rather intricate
process that depends on a multitude of molecular, process, and technical parameters.
The method provides access to entirely new materials, which may have complex chemical
structures. Electrospinning is not only a focus of intense academic investigation;
the technique is already being applied in many technological areas.