The electrospinning process is a technique based on the use of an electrical charge to draw fibres from a polymer-solvent solution. The basic laboratory setup consists of a spinneret (micro needle) connected to a high-voltage (5-30Kv) power supply, a syringe pump, and a grounded collector plate. The polymer solution is extruded from the needle tip at a constant rate by the syringe pump, forming a droplet. The voltage applied causes the droplet to stretch into a Taylor cone. If the molecular cohesion of the material is sufficiently high, stream breakup does not occur (if it does, droplets are electrosprayed) and a charged liquid jet is formed. The jet is then elongated by a whipping process caused by electrostatic repulsion initiated at small bends in the fibre stretching it to nanometer-scale before being deposited on the grounded collector. The solvent must evaporate for the polymer to solidify forming a fibre [9-11].