“…Compared with various routes including melt-blown [14], template synthesis [15], sea-island spinning [16], phase-separation [17], plasma treatment [18], etc., electrospinning has emerged as the most versatile and effective technology for large-scale fabricating nanofibers with controlled morphologies and functional components from various materials [19,20]. And, many electrospun filtration media (usually with diameter of 100 nm to 1 lm), such as polyacrylonitrile (PAN) [21], PAN/poly(acrylic acid) [22], PAN/polyurethane (PU) [23], polyvinyl chloride/PU [7], polyetherimide [24], polysulfone [25], poly(lactic acid) [26], and polyamide-66 (PA-66) [27] , have been successfully prepared and exhibit effectively enhanced filtration performance. However, they still suffer from some drawbacks: inadequate filtration performance, weak mechanical property, and short service life caused by the deep bed filtration manner, all of which can be ascribe to the limited structural controllability involving thick fiber diameter (not real nanoscale of <100 nm) and easy-collapsed cavity structure.…”