Publications by authors named "Yasmina Fedala"

The structure and functioning of microbial communities from fermented foods, including cheese, have been extensively studied during the past decade. However, there is still a lack of information about both the occurrence and the role of viruses in modulating the function of this type of spatially structured and solid ecosystems. Viral metagenomics was recently applied to a wide variety of environmental samples and standardized procedures for recovering viral particles from different type of materials has emerged.

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There is a constant need for direct counting of biotic nanoparticles such as viruses to unravel river functioning. We used, for the first time in freshwater, a new method based on interferometry differentiating viruses from other particles such as membrane vesicles. In the French Marne River, viruses represented between 42 and 72% of the particles.

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Article Synopsis
  • There is a large presence of viruses and membrane vesicles in seawater, prompting the need for effective detection methods.
  • The study introduces a new detection technique that combines full-field interferometry and Brownian motion analysis to identify and differentiate biotic nanoparticles, including viruses.
  • The method successfully characterized viruses as small as 30 nm and was applied to analyze samples from various ocean environments, revealing unique movement patterns for certain viruses.
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In order to characterize surface chemo-mechanical phenomena driving micro-electro-mechanical systems (MEMSs) behavior, it has been previously proposed to use reflected intensity fields obtained from a standard microscope for different illumination wavelengths. Wavelength-dependent and -independent reflectivity fields are obtained from these images, provided the relative reflectance sensitivities ratio can be identified. This contribution focuses on the necessary calibration procedures and mathematical methods allowing for a quantitative conversion from a mechanically induced reflectivity field to a surface rotation field, therefore paving the way for a quantitative mechanical analysis of MEMS under chemical loading.

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The coating of gold (Au) electrode surfaces with nitrophenyl (NP) layers is studied by combination of electrochemical actuation and optical detection. The electrochemical actuation of the reduction of the nitrobenzenediazonium (NBD) precursor is used to generate NP radicals and therefore initiate the electrografting. The electrografting process is followed in situ and in real time by light reflectivity microscopy imaging, allowing for spatio-temporal imaging with sub-micrometer lateral resolution and sub-nanometer thickness sensitivity of the local growth of a transparent organic coating onto a reflecting Au electrode.

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Using the surface enhanced ellipsometric contrast microscopy, we follow the last stage of the spreading of egg phosphatidylcholine nanodroplets on a hydrophilic substrate in a humid atmosphere, focusing on the vanishing trilayer in terraced droplets reduced to coexisting monolayer and trilayer. We find that the line interface between them exhibits two coexisting states, one mobile and one fixed. From there, it is possible to elucidate the internal structure and the spreading mechanism of the stratified liquid in a case of asymmetric wetting, i.

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The deflection of cantilever systems may be performed by an indirect electrochemical method that consists of measuring the local cantilever activity and deflection in a feedback generation-collection configuration of the SECM. This is illustrated during the electrochemically assisted adsorption of Br onto a gold-coated cantilever, either in its pristine state or previously coated with a thin organic barrier. It is further extended to the adsorption of an antibody in a heterogeneous immunoassay at an allergen-coated microcantilever platform.

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Various four-mirror optical resonators are studied from the perspective of realizing passive stacking cavities. A comparative study of the mechanical stability is provided. The polarization properties of the cavity eigenmodes are described, and it is shown that the effect of mirror misalignments (or motions) induces polarization and stacking power instabilities.

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