Publications by authors named "P Saint-Cricq"

Article Synopsis
  • Researchers are exploring new methods to create hybrid materials, particularly from plentiful metal oxides like titanium oxide (TiO), to enhance their properties for various applications.
  • The paper introduces a technique called 'molecular cross-linking,' which uses robust boron-cluster molecular building blocks to create hybrid boron oxide materials that can withstand harsh synthesis conditions.
  • Through experimental methods and simulations, the study demonstrates successful integration of these boron-rich materials with TiO and other metal oxides, resulting in new materials with unique optical and electrochemical features.
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Many machines (including nanomachines) consist of a solid support with moving parts that can undergo large amplitude motion to carry out specific tasks. In this Minireview, we will describe nanomachines that are supported on mesoporous silica nanoparticles that are typically 50-100 nanometers in diameter and have an array of open, readily accessible pores with an average width of a few nanometers. For triggering a large amplitude motion of the moving parts, we will focus primarily on external stimuli such as heat or light.

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A facile, reproducible, and scalable method was explored to construct uniform Au@poly(acrylic acid) (PAA) Janus nanoparticles (JNPs). The as-prepared JNPs were used as templates to preferentially grow a mesoporous silica (mSiO2 ) shell and Au branches separately modified with methoxy-poly(ethylene glycol)-thiol (PEG) to improve their stability, and lactobionic acid (LA) for tumor-specific targeting. The obtained octopus-type PEG-Au-PAA/mSiO2 -LA Janus NPs (PEG-OJNP-LA) possess pH and NIR dual-responsive release properties.

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Core-shell Fe3O4@SiO2 mesoporous silica nanoparticles coated with a new thermodegradable polymer allowed the release of a model drug through heating caused by a high frequency oscillating magnetic field. The thermodegradable polymer was made of poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) functionalised with azo bonds that break with an elevation of temperature.

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