“…To investigate the reusability of TFPNMs,five commonly home-exercisable methods were operated on cTFPNMs: [24] (1) heat treatment with temperature at 80 8 8C( High temperature above 70 8 8Cc ould lead to protein denaturation of SARS-CoV-2 over 5min); [25] (2) steam (100 8 8Ch eat-based protein denaturation);( 3) 75 %a lcohol (protein denaturation); [26] (4) domestic chlorine-based solution (cellular denaturation, with chemical damage); [27] (5) ultraviolet germicidal irradiation (DNA/RNAdisruption, UVC 254 nm). [28] As seen in Supporting Information, Table S4, all the filtration efficiencies remain unchanged at N97 level after the first treatment cycle with pressure drops maintained at 9-10 Pa. Theg eometry and loftiness of the cTFPNMs are unchanged (Supporting Information, Figure S7) and the surface polarities keep comparable (Supporting Information, Table S1), which further demonstrates that the TFPNMs are stable for reuse.I nc ontrast, the N95 FFRs show different filtration performances upon various treatments after the first cycle.As seen in Supporting Information, Table S5, heating and ultraviolet germicidal irradiation (UVGI) can preserve the filtration characteristics for most N95 FFRs.H owever,t he filtration efficiencies drastically decrease to 50-80 %u pon solu-tion-based treatments with ac omplete degradation on electrostatic charge quantity to 0kV, which is far beyond N95 grade.T aking the MEO-brand N95 FFR as an example, large pores randomly exist in the meltblown samples (Supporting Information, Figure S8), leading to an unacceptable filtration efficiencya t6 8.58 %a nd 57.33 %i n7 5% alcohol and chlorine-based solution, respectively.T he corresponding pressure drops change from 8Pat o1 0Pa( in 75 %a lcohol) and 5Pa( in chlorine-based solution), respectively (Supporting Information, Table S6).…”