NobleBlocks

Laboratoire du Futur

facilityPessac, Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France

Research output, citation impact, and the most-cited recent papers from Laboratoire du Futur (France). Aggregated across the NobleBlocks index of 300M+ scholarly works.

Total works
1.3K
Citations
36.9K
h-index
91
i10-index
711
Also known as
Laboratoire du FuturUMR 5258UMR5258

Top-cited papers from Laboratoire du Futur

Droplet Control for Microfluidics
Mathieu Joanicot, Armand Ajdari
2005· Science376doi:10.1126/science.1112615

Future applications of microfluidic technology--in which nanoliter quantities of chemicals are processed and reacted, perhaps on an integrated chip--would immensely benefit from exquisite control of small droplets. In their Perspective, Joanicot and Ajdari discuss recent developments in droplet creation and management within microfluidic devices. New methods for microscale control, combined with better theoretical understanding, will result in precise handling of chemical processes at the single-droplet level and engineering of new materials.

Stability of a Jet in Confined Pressure-Driven Biphasic Flows at Low Reynolds Numbers
Pierre Guillot, Annie Colin, Andrew S. Utada, Armand Ajdari
2007· Physical Review Letters286doi:10.1103/physrevlett.99.104502

Motivated by its importance for microfluidic applications, we study the stability of jets formed by pressure-driven concentric biphasic flows in cylindrical capillaries. The specificity of this variant of the classical Rayleigh-Plateau instability is the role of the geometry which imposes confinement and Poiseuille flow profiles. We experimentally evidence a transition between situations where the flow takes the form of a jet and regimes where drops are produced. We describe this as the transition from convective to absolute instability, within a simple linear analysis using lubrication theory for flows at low Reynolds number, and reach remarkable agreement with the data.

Generation of Polymerosomes from Double-Emulsions
Élise Lorenceau, Andrew S. Utada, Darren R. Link, Galder Cristobal +2 more
2005· Langmuir267doi:10.1021/la050797d

Diblock copolymers are known to spontaneously organize into polymer vesicles. Typically, this is achieved through the techniques of film rehydration or electroformation. We present a new method for generating polymer vesicles from double emulsions. We generate precision water-in-oil-in-water double emulsions from the breakup of concentric fluid streams; the hydrophobic fluid is a volatile mixture of organic solvent that contains dissolved diblock copolymers. We collect the double emulsions and slowly evaporate the organic solvent, which ultimately directs the self-assembly of the dissolved diblock copolymers into vesicular structures. Independent control over all three fluid streams enables precision assembly of polymer vesicles and provides for highly efficient encapsulation of active ingredients within the polymerosomes. We also use double emulsions with several internal drops to form new polymerosome structures.

Laser-assisted bioprinting for creating on-demand patterns of human osteoprogenitor cells and nano-hydroxyapatite
Sylvain Catros, Jean‐Christophe Fricain, Bertrand Guillotin, Benjamin E. Pippenger +4 more
2011· Biofabrication238doi:10.1088/1758-5082/3/2/025001

Developing tools to reproduce and manipulate the cell micro-environment, including the location and shape of cell patterns, is essential for tissue engineering. Parallel to inkjet printing and pressure-operated mechanical extruders, laser-assisted bioprinting (LAB) has emerged as an alternative technology to fabricate two- and three-dimensional tissue engineering products. The objective of this work was to determine laser printing parameters for patterning and assembling nano-hydroxyapatite (nHA) and human osteoprogenitors (HOPs) in two and three dimensions with LAB. The LAB workstation used in this study comprised an infrared laser focused on a quartz ribbon that was coated with a thin absorbing layer of titanium and a layer of bioink. The scanning system, quartz ribbon and substrate were piloted by dedicated software, allowing the sequential printing of different biological materials into two and/or three dimensions. nHA printing material (bioink) was synthesized by chemical precipitation and was characterized prior and following printing using transmission electron microscopy, Fourier transformed infrared spectroscopy and x-ray diffraction. HOP bioink was prepared using a 30 million cells ml(-1) suspension in culture medium and cells were characterized after printing using a Live/Dead assay and osteoblastic phenotype markers (alcaline phosphatase and osteocalcin). The results revealed that LAB allows printing and organizing nHA and HOPs in two and three dimensions. LAB did not alter the physico-chemical properties of nHA, nor the viability, proliferation and phenotype of HOPs over time (up to 15 days). This study has demonstrated that LAB is a relevant method for patterning nHA and osteoblastic cells in 2D, and is also adapted to the bio-fabrication of 3D composite materials.

Stability of parallel flows in a microchannel after a T junction
Pierre Guillot, Annie Colin
2005· Physical Review E228doi:10.1103/physreve.72.066301

In this work, the flow of immiscible fluids in microchannels is studied. Flow pattern diagrams obtained in microfluidic chips are presented. Monodisperse droplets or parallel flows are obtained depending on the flow rate values of the aqueous phase and the oil phase. Transition from droplet regime to parallel flows cannot be described in terms of capillary numbers. Using confocal microscopy and high speed imaging, it was shown that droplets are formed through a blocking-pinching mechanism ruled by flow rate conservation. Conditions for parallel flow stability are quantified.

Integrin αvβ3 expression confers on tumor cells a greater propensity to metastasize to bone
Isabelle Pécheur, Olivier Peyruchaud, Claire‐Marie Serre, Julien Guglielmi +4 more
2002· The FASEB Journal220doi:10.1096/fj.01-0911fje

The reasons why tumor cells metastasize to bone remain obscure. There is some evidence to support the theory that integrins (acting as cell surface adhesion receptors) play a role in mediating metastasis in certain organs. Here, we report that overexpression of a functionally active integrin alpha(v)b3 in Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) tumor cells drastically increased the incidence, number, and area of bone metastases in nude mice compared with those observed in mock-transfected CHO cells (CHO dhfr+) or in CHO cells expressing a functionally inactive integrin alpha(v)b3 (CHO beta3Delta744). Moreover, a breast cancer cell line (B02) established from bone metastases caused by MDA-MB-231 cells constitutively overexpressed integrin alpha(v)b3, whereas the cell surface expression level of other integrins remained unchanged. In vivo, the extent of bone metastases in B02-bearing mice was significantly increased compared with that of MDA-MB-231-bearing mice. In vitro, B02 cells and CHO cells expressing a functionally active integrin alpha(v)b3 exhibited substantially increased invasion of and adhesion to mineralized bone, bone sialoprotein, and collagen compared with those found with MDA-MB-231, CHO dhfr+, and CHO beta3Delta744 cells, respectively. Overall, our findings suggest that integrin alpha(v)b3 expression in tumor cells accelerates the development of osteolytic lesions, presumably through increased invasion of and adhesion to bone.

Yielding and Flow in Adhesive and Nonadhesive Concentrated Emulsions
Lydiane Bécu, Sébastien Manneville, Annie Colin
2006· Physical Review Letters212doi:10.1103/physrevlett.96.138302

The nonlinear rheological response of soft glassy materials is addressed experimentally by focusing on concentrated emulsions where interdroplet attraction is tuned through varying the surfactant content. Velocity profiles are recorded using ultrasonic velocimetry simultaneously to global rheological data in the Couette geometry. Our data show that nonadhesive and adhesive emulsions have radically different flow behaviors in the vicinity of yielding: while the flow remains homogeneous in the nonadhesive emulsion and the Herschel-Bulkley model for a yield stress fluid describes the data very accurately, the adhesive system displays shear localization and does not follow a simple constitutive equation, suggesting that the mechanisms involved in yielding transitions are not universal.

Effective permeability of fractured porous media in steady state flow
I. Bogdanov, V. V. Mourzenko, Jean‐François Thovert, P. M. Adler
2003· Water Resources Research210doi:10.1029/2001wr000756

Flow in fractured porous media was first investigated by Barenblatt and Zheltov [1960] and Barenblatt et al. [1960] by means of the double‐porosity model. A direct, exact, and complete numerical solution of the flow in such media is given in this paper for arbitrary distributions of permeabilities in the porous matrix and in the fracture network. The fracture network and the porous matrix are automatically meshed; the flow equations are discretized by means of the finite volume method. This code has been so far applied to incompressible fluids and to statistically homogeneous media which are schematized as spatially periodic media. Some results pertaining to random networks of polygonal fractures are presented and discussed; they show the importance of the percolation threshold of the fracture network and possibly of the porous matrix. Moreover, the influence of the fracture shape can be taken into account by means of the excluded volume.

Inorganic monoliths hierarchically textured via concentrated direct emulsion and micellar templatesElectronic supplementary information (ESI) available: XRD profiles, nitrogen physisorption data and pore size distribution calculated from density functional theory, for the xSi-HIPE0.035 series. See http://www.rsc.org/suppdata/jm/b4/b400984c/
Florent Carn, Annie Colin, Marie‐France Achard, Herv� Deleuze +3 more
2004· Journal of Materials Chemistry190doi:10.1039/b400984c

Hierarchical inorganic porous monoliths have been prepared using concentrated emulsion and micellar templates. The texture of these monoliths has to be tuned varying either the pH of the continuous aqueous phase, the emulsification process or the oil volumic fraction. These materials show interconnected macroporosity associated with vermicular-type mesostructuration. They possess an average mesoporosity of 800 m2 g−1 associated with bulk density as low as 0.08 g cm−3, which is comparable to values obtained for silica aerogel.

Thermoreversible Gels as Magneto‐Optical Switches
Olivier Roubeau, Annie Colin, Véronique Schmitt, Rodolphe Clérac
2004· Angewandte Chemie International Edition186doi:10.1002/anie.200454050

Polyfunctional gels: Thermoreversible switchable gels with tunable magnetic, optical, and rheological properties are obtained from a modified spin-crossover polymeric precursor and alkane solvents (see picture). The iron triazole polymer which acts as the gelator, undergoes a spin crossover that is accompanied by a change in the color of the gel. The transfer of spin-crossover properties from solid materials into gels offers a route to new applications. Supporting information for this article is available on the WWW under http://www.wiley-vch.de/contents/jc_2002/2004/z54050_s.pdf or from the author. Please note: The publisher is not responsible for the content or functionality of any supporting information supplied by the authors. Any queries (other than missing content) should be directed to the corresponding author for the article.

Microfluidic crystallization
Jacques Leng, Jean‐Baptiste Salmon
2008· Lab on a Chip161doi:10.1039/b807653g

Microfluidics offers a wide range of new tools that permit one to revisit the formation of crystals in solution and yield insights into crystallization processes. We review such recent microfluidic devices and particularly emphasize lab-on-chips dedicated to the high-throughput screening of crystallization conditions of proteins with nanolitre consumption. We also thoroughly discuss the possibilities offered by the microfluidic tools to acquire thermodynamic and kinetic data that may improve industrial processes and shed a new light on nucleation and growth mechanisms.

Foam Drainage in the Presence of Nanoparticle−Surfactant Mixtures
Florent Carn, Annie Colin, Olivier Pitois, P. M. Adler +1 more
2009· Langmuir161doi:10.1021/la900414q

The drainage of SiO(2) nanoparticle-cationic surfactant (TTAB) mixtures through calibrated aqueous foams had been studied by combining several approaches on both the macroscopic and the local scale. Macroscopic measurements reveal a strong stabilizing effect arising for nanoparticle concentrations as low as 2 wt % mainly because of a drainage kinetic slow-down dependent on the nanoparticle concentration. We show that the variation of the viscous parameters (bulk viscosity, interfacial viscosity, or both) in the classical theoretical models of foam drainage, mainly developed for aqueous surfactant solutions, does not enable fitting experimental data obtained via steady- or free-drainage strategies for [SiO(2)] > or = 2 wt %. In contrast, the quantitative analysis of the data obtained from front propagation velocities has revealed a drainage regime transition from a node-dominated regime toward a Plateau-border-dominated regime upon nanoparticle concentration increase. Observations performed at the Plateau border scale brought to light the drainage kinetic slow-down process by evidencing that the presence of insoluble aggregates induces traffic jamming and even cork formation for silica concentrations above 2 wt %. Considering these observations, a simple mechanism of aggregate growth and cork formation is proposed. Finally, we analyze the discrepancy between experiments (steady- and free-drainage methods) and theory by pointing out that the hypothesis relative to the foam structure that is usually assumed for both the liquid fraction calculation and the determination via conductivity measurements is strongly modified when large insoluble aggregates are present in the system. In this view, the method based on the liquid fraction determination through the measurement of the front propagation velocity seems to be the most suitable for studying the drainage of colloidal dispersion because of the lower dependence of this approach toward hypothesis on the local geometry of the foam continuous phase.

Thermal Stabilisation of Polymer–Fullerene Bulk Heterojunction Morphology for Efficient Photovoltaic Solar Cells
Lionel Derue, Olivier J. Dautel, Aurélien Tournebize, Martin Drees +4 more
2014· Advanced Materials159doi:10.1002/adma.201401062

A novel stable bisazide molecule that can freeze the bulk heterojunction morphology at its optimized layout by specifically bonding to fullerenes is reported. The concept is demonstrated with various polymers: fullerene derivatives systems enable highly thermally stable polymer solar cells.

Drainage in two-dimensional porous media: From capillary fingering to viscous flow
Christophe Cottin, Hugues Bodiguel, Annie Colin
2010· Physical Review E154doi:10.1103/physreve.82.046315

This paper reports some experimental results on two-phase flows in model two-dimensional porous media. Standard microfluidic techniques are used to fabricate networks of straight microchannels and to control the throat size distribution. We analyze both the invasion mechanism of the medium by a nonwetting fluid and the drainage after the percolation for capillary numbers lying between 10(-7) and 10(-2). We propose a crude model allowing a description of the observed capillary fingering that captures its scaling properties. This model is supported by numerical simulations based on a pore-network model. Numerical simulations and experiments agree quantitatively.

Viscosimeter on a Microfluidic Chip
Pierre Guillot, Pascal Panizza, Jean‐Baptiste Salmon, Mathieu Joanicot +3 more
2006· Langmuir142doi:10.1021/la060131z

In this work, a viscosimeter implemented on a microfluidic chip is presented. The physical principle of this system is to use laminar parallel flows in a microfluidic channel. The fluid to be studied flows side by side with a reference fluid of known viscosity. By using optical microscopy, the shape of the interface between both fluids can be determined. Knowing the flow rates of the two liquids and the geometrical features of the channel, the mean shear rate sustained by the fluid and its viscosity can thus be computed. Accurate and precise measurements of the viscosity as a function of the shear rate can be made using less than 300 microL of fluid. Several complex fluids are tested with viscosities ranging from 10(-)(3) to 70 Pa.s.

Controllable Microfluidic Production of Drug-Loaded PLGA Nanoparticles Using Partially Water-Miscible Mixed Solvent Microdroplets as a Precursor
Jiang Xu, Shusheng Zhang, Anais Machado, Sébastien Lecommandoux +3 more
2017· Scientific Reports133doi:10.1038/s41598-017-05184-5

We present a versatile continuous microfluidic flow-focusing method for the production of Doxorubicin (DOX) or Tamoxifen (TAM)-loaded poly(D,L-lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA) nanoparticles (NPs). We use a partially water-miscible solvent mixture (dimethyl sulfoxide DMSO+ dichloromethane DCM) as precursor drug/polymer solution for NPs nucleation. We extrude this partially water-miscible solution into an aqueous medium and synthesized uniform PLGA NPs with higher drug loading ability and longer sustained-release ability than conventional microfluidic or batch preparation methods. The size of NPs could be precisely tuned by changing the flow rate ratios, polymer concentration, and volume ratio of DCM to DMSO (VDCM/VDMSO) in the precursor emulsion. We investigated the mechanism of the formation of NPs and the effect of VDCM/VDMSO on drug release kinetics. Our work suggests that this original, rapid, facile, efficient and low-cost method is a promising technology for high throughput NP fabrication. For the two tested drugs, one hydrophilic (Doxorubicin) the other one hydrophobic (Tamoxifen), encapsulation efficiency (EE) as high as 88% and mass loading content (LC) higher than 25% were achieved. This new process could be extended as an efficient and large scale NP production method to benefit to fields like controlled drug release and nanomedicine.

Soft Acoustic Metamaterials
Thomas Brunet, Jacques Leng, Olivier Mondain‐Monval
2013· Science132doi:10.1126/science.1241727

Soft materials that embed small resonators in a host material can dampen or focus sound.

Droplet Traffic at a Simple Junction at Low Capillary Numbers
Wilfried Engl, Matthieu Roché, Annie Colin, P. Panizza +1 more
2005· Physical Review Letters129doi:10.1103/physrevlett.95.208304

We report that, when a train of confined droplets flowing through a channel reaches a junction, the droplets either are alternately distributed between the different outlets or all collect into the shortest one. We argue that this behavior is due to the hydrodynamic feedback of droplets in the different outlets on the selection process occurring at the junction. A "mean field" model, yielding semiquantitative results, offers a first guide to predict droplet traffic in branched networks.

Measurements, performance and analysis of LoRa FABIAN, a real-world implementation of LPWAN
Tara Petrić, Mathieu Goessens, Loutfi Nuaymi, Laurent Toutain +1 more
2016124doi:10.1109/pimrc.2016.7794569

Up to recently, two main approaches were used for connecting the “things” in the growing Internet of Things (IoT) - one based on multi-hop mesh networks, using short-range technologies and unlicensed spectrum, and the other based on long-range cellular network technologies using corresponding licensed frequency bands. New type of connectivity used in Low-Power Wide Area networks (LPWAN), challenges these approaches by using low-rate long-range transmission technologies in unlicensed sub-GHz frequency bands. In this paper, we do performance testing on one such star-topology network, based on Semtech's LoRa™ technology, and deployed in the city of Rennes - LoRa FABIAN. In order to check the quality of service (QoS) that this network can provide, generally and in given conditions, we conducted a set of performance measurements. We performed our tests by generating and then observing the traffic between IoT nodes and LoRa IoT stations using our LoRa FABIAN protocol stack. With our experimental setup, we were able to generate traffic very similar to the one that can be used by real application such as sensor monitoring. This let us extract basic performance metrics, such as packet error rate (PER), but also metrics related specifically to the LoRa physical layer, such as the Received Signal Strength Indicator (RSSI) and Signal to Noise ratio (SNR), within various conditions. Our findings provide insight about the performance of LoRa networks, but also about evaluation methods for these type of networks. We gathered measurement data that we make freely available together with the tools we used.

Stability of a jet in confined pressure-driven biphasic flows at low Reynolds number in various geometries
Pierre Guillot, Annie Colin, Armand Ajdari
2008· Physical Review E123doi:10.1103/physreve.78.016307

We adress the question of the stability of a confined coflowing jet at low Reynolds number in various geometries. Our study is motivated by recent experiments in microfluidic devices. When immiscible fluids flow in microchannels, either monodisperse droplets or parallel flows are obtained depending upon the flow rate of the aqueous phase and the oil phase. In these experiments, the confining and the shape of the geometry play a fundamental role. In a previous paper [Guillot, Phys. Rev. Lett 99, 104502 (2007)], we analyzed the stability of the jet in the framework of the lubrication approximation at low Reynolds number in a cylindrical geometry, and we related the transition between the droplets regime and the jet regime to the absolute-convective transition of the Rayleigh plateau instability. In this work, the effect of the channel geometry and the jet position within the microfluidic device are discussed. New flow patterns are pointed out. Bidimensional jets are encountered in square and rectangular geometry. Contrary to jets occuring in circular geometry, these two-dimensional jets are absolutely stable. Focusing on situations where the inner fluid is more viscous than the outer one, we evidence a range of parameters where droplets are produced through a blocking and pinching mechanism. In this particular case, the flow is unstable, the growing perturbations are convected upstream. This induces the clogging of the channel by the internal phase and its pinching by the external one. In a future presentation we will give a comparison between this model and experimental data.