Melt blowing is a conventional fabrication method of micro- and nanofibers where a polymer melt is extruded through small nozzles surrounded by high speed blowing gas. The randomly deposited fibers form a nonwoven sheet product applicable for filtration, sorbents, apparels and drug delivery. Meltblown technology plays a decisive role in the production of high-performance nonwovens - especially when it comes to the production of ultrafine fibers. This way. A fiber pigtail is typically a fiber optic cable with one end factory pre-terminated fiber connector and the other exposed fiber. The fibers are up to seventy times. The most commonly accepted and current definition for the melt-blown process is: 'a one-step process in which high-velocity air blows molten thermoplastic resin from an extruder die tip onto a conveyor or takeup screen to form a fine fibered self-bonded web'. It's simple enough to explain in a sentence but rich enough to influence global filtration.
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