COVID-19 Rapid Response Innovation Project
Creating an alternative material to produce protective face masks
The challenge
Meeting the demand for personal protective equipment (PPE), such as face masks approved for use by medical professionals, is a key challenge in the fight against COVID-19. Currently, the masks are made from polypropylene fabrics that filter micro-particles and virus-containing droplets. Unfortunately, there is a shortage of these masks, which are not reusable, and even developed countries are unable to produce enough to meet the demand.
The solution
The ViruShield project will address the shortage of masks for medical professionals by developing an alternative high-performance fabric that is cheap, easily available, washable and reusable, and can make masks that meet the EU standards for protection. The solution is a new textile that is based on widely available raw materials, like cotton, and can be produced in existing facilities, such as textile mills and clothing factories. The diverse expertise in the ViruShield team will allow design of the fabric to be informed by: (1) state-of-the art fibre and textile surface technology and practical knowledge of available textile machinery; (2) soft-matter physics, to find the optimal porous surface and fibres to bind COVID-19 in droplets and aerosols; and (3) technology to include durable self-disinfectant qualities on textile surfaces. The project will explore nonwoven production technologies, such as electrospinning, as well as a technique to mechanically roughen the surfaces of woven and knitted cotton and linen fabrics into dense, fleece-like structures. Production of new masks could be handled by garment producers, who currently have capacity because the ongoing economic crisis creates slack demand for their products.
Expected impact
The primary impact of this project will be to make it possible to achieve a rapid increase in the supply of PPE for medical professionals. Making the masks reusable will also help to alleviate the current shortage in supply. Because the goal is to make a product that can be mass-produced, the project should also provide work for garment producers, who are currently faced with a drastic drop in demand for their regular goods.
All Partners
EIT Health Partner
- RWTH Aachen University
External partners
- FU Berlin
- Scientific Products GmbH
EIT Health Partner
CLC/InnoStars: Germany
Partner classification: Education, Research, Tech Transfer, Clusters, Other NGOs, Hospital / University Hospital
Partner type: Associate Partner
RWTH Aachen University and its hospital (focus on patient-oriented medicine & nursing care) provide leading research, innovation and education within the core themes of EIT Health. Our industry-need-driven competence centres foster entrepreneurship
RWTH Aachen University
RWTH Aachen University, Templergraben 55, 52062 Aachen, Germany
Key Activities in Research and Developement
Biomedical engineering, Life Sciences, Social sciences / health economics, Clinical research
Key Activities in Business Creation
Incubation, Technology Transfer, Testing & Validation
Key Activities in Education
Entrepreneurship training, Technical faculties, Medical faculties, Healthcare professional education/training