Publications by authors named "Cecile Delacour"

In vitro model networks could provide cellular models of physiological relevance to reproduce and investigate the basic function of neural circuits on a chip in the laboratory. Several tools and methods have been developed since the past decade to build neural networks on a chip; among them, microfluidic circuits appear to be a highly promising approach. One of the numerous advantages of this approach is that it preserves stable somatic and axonal compartments over time due to physical barriers that prevent the soma from exploring undesired areas and guide neurites along defined pathways.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Dual-light emitting Yb,Er-codoped α-La(IO) nanocrystals, known to exhibit both second harmonic signal and photoluminescence (PL), are evaluated as optical nanoprobes and thermal sensors using both conventional microscopes and a more sophisticated micro-PL setup. When loaded in cortical and hippocampal neurons for a few hours at a concentration of 0.01 mg/mL, a visible PL signal arising from the nanocrystals can be clearly detected using an epifluorescent conventional microscope, enabling to localize the nanocrystals along the stained neurons and to record PL variation with temperature of 0.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Electronic micro and nano-devices face challenges in monitoring neuronal activity due to poor acceptance and high immune response of neural cells to current inorganic materials, resulting in device failure and limited lifetime.
  • Graphene and carbon-based materials show promise for improving neuron adhesion and regeneration, potentially enhancing the biocompatibility of intracortical probes through the use of flexible substrates and advanced electronic devices like graphene field effect transistors (G-FET).
  • To protect graphene during implantation and prolong its functionality, researchers investigated biocompatible coatings made from hyaluronic acid (HA) that can be applied without compromising the performance of the devices, while also allowing for monitoring of the coating's effectiveness through charge measurement in G-FET arrays.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The invasiveness of intracortical interfaces currently used today is responsible for the formation of an intense immunoresponse and inflammatory reaction from neural cells and tissues. This leads to a high concentration of reactive glial cells around the implant site, creating a physical barrier between the neurons and the recording channels. Such a rejection of foreign analog interfaces causes neural signals to fade from recordings which become flooded by background noise after a few weeks.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The emergence of nanoelectronics applied to neural interfaces has started few decades ago, and aims to provide new tools for replacing or restoring disabled functions of the nervous systems as well as further understanding the evolution of such complex organization. As the same time, graphene and other 2D materials have offered new possibilities for integrating micro and nano-devices on flexible, transparent, and biocompatible substrates, promising for bio and neuro-electronics. In addition to many bio-suitable features of graphene interface, such as, chemical inertness and anti-corrosive properties, its optical transparency enables multimodal approach of neuronal based systems, the electrical layer being compatible with additional microfluidics and optical manipulation ports.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Graphene's unique properties make it a promising material for bioelectric interfacing in neuroscience, particularly for neuronal growth due to its mechanical and electrical qualities.
  • Studying pristine, CVD-grown monolayer graphene, researchers found it enhances neuronal adhesion and growth in early culture stages, outperforming traditional coated surfaces.
  • The findings indicate that the crystallinity of graphene affects neuronal attachment and development, with higher quality graphene promoting adhesion while lower quality leads to detachment, highlighting its potential for medical implants and tissue engineering without adhesive coatings.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We present low-temperature electronic transport properties of superconducting nanowires obtained by nanolithography of 4-nm-thick niobium nitride (NbN) films epitaxially grown on sapphire substrate. Below 6 K, clear evidence of phase slippages is observed in the transport measurements. Upon lowering the temperature, we observe the signatures of a crossover between a thermal and a quantum behavior in the phase slip regimes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We demonstrate that the optical energy carried by a TE dielectric waveguide mode can be totally transferred into a transverse plasmon mode of a coupled metal nanoparticle chain. Experiments are performed at 1.5 μm.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Coupling plasmonics and silicon photonics is the best way to bridge the size gap between macroscopic optics and nanodevices in general and especially nanoelectronic devices. We report on the realization of key blocks for future plasmonic planar integrated optics, nano-optical couplers, and nanoslot waveguides that are compatible both with the silicon photonics and the CMOS microelectronics. Copper-based devices provide for very efficient optical coupling, unexpectedly low propagation losses and a broadband sub-50 nm optical confinement.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We present a fabrication method producing large and flat graphene flakes that have a few layers down to a single layer based on substrate bonding of a thick sample of highly oriented pyrolytic graphite (HOPG), followed by its controlled exfoliation down to the few to single graphene atomic layers. As the graphite underlayer is intimately bonded to the substrate during the exfoliation process, the obtained graphene flakes are remarkably large and flat and present very few folds and pleats. The high occurrence of single-layered graphene sheets being tens of microns wide in lateral dimensions is assessed by complementary probes including spatially resolved micro-Raman spectroscopy, atomic force microscopy and electrostatic force microscopy.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF