Publications by authors named "Francois-Damien Delapierre"

In this report, high-frequency electric impedance spectroscopy was performed to investigate ionic transport through nanochannels. Special attention was focused on (i) conductance behaviors depending on the role of cation valence in three background electrolytes (XCln): monovalent 1-1 (K and Cl), divalent 2-1 (Mg and 2Cl), and trivalent 3-1 (La and 3Cl), (ii) the effects of proton and bicarbonate ions on bulk and surface conductance, and (iii) the connected microchannel dimension (surface/height ratio aspect) within the nanochannel apparent conductance. The results highlight a net quantitative increase in surface silanol density and a strong decrease in surface ionization degree when lanthanum cations are employed.

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The development of rapid, sensitive, portable and inexpensive early diagnostic techniques is a real challenge in the fields of health, defense and in the environment. The current global pandemic has also shown the need for such tests. The World Health Organization has defined ASSURED criteria (affordable, sensitive, specific, user-friendly, rapid and robust, equipment-free and deliverable to end-users) that field diagnostic tests must fulfill, which proves the real need in terms of public health.

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Concentration polarization (CP)-based focusing electrokinetics nanofluidic devices have been developed in order to simultaneously detect and enrich highly diluted analytes on-a-chip. However, stabilization of focal points over long time under the application of the electric field remains as a technical bottleneck. If pressure-assisted preconcentration methods have been proposed to stabilize propagating modes at low inverse Dukhin number , these recent protocols remain laborious for optimizing experimental parameters.

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Inexpensive simple medical devices allowing fast and reliable counting of whole cells are of interest for diagnosis and treatment monitoring. Magnetic-based labs on a chip are one of the possibilities currently studied to address this issue. Giant magnetoresistance (GMR) sensors offer both great sensitivity and device integrability with microfluidics and electronics.

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A novel technology is reported to immobilize different types of particles or cells on a surface at predefined positions with a micrometric precision. The process uses capillary assembly on arrays of crescent-shaped structures with different orientations. Sequential assemblies in different substrate orientations with different types of particles allow for the creation of imbricated and multiplexed arrays.

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We combine technical, experimental, and theoretical efforts to investigate the collective dynamics of artificial microcilia in a viscous fluid. We take advantage of soft lithography and colloidal self-assembly to devise microcarpets made of hundreds of slender magnetic rods. This novel experimental setup is used to investigate the dynamics of extended cilia arrays driven by a precessing magnetic field.

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