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Dive into the research topics where Antoine Niguès is active.

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Featured researches published by Antoine Niguès.


Physical Review Letters | 2016

Scaling behavior for ionic transport and its fluctuations in individual carbon nanotubes

Eleonora Secchi; Antoine Niguès; Laetitia Jubin; Alessandro Siria; Lydéric Bocquet

In this Letter, we perform an experimental study of ionic transport and current fluctuations inside individual carbon nanotubes (CNTs). The conductance exhibits a power law behavior at low salinity, with an exponent close to 1/3 versus the salt concentration in this regime. This behavior is rationalized in terms of a salinity dependent surface charge, which is accounted for on the basis of a model for hydroxide adsorption at the (hydrophobic) carbon surface. This is in contrast to boron nitride nanotubes which exhibit a constant surface conductance. Further, we measure the low frequency noise of the ionic current in CNTs and show that the amplitude of the noise scales with the surface charge, with data collapsing on a master curve for the various studied CNTs at a given pH.


Nature Communications | 2017

Pairwise frictional profile between particles determines discontinuous shear thickening transition in non-colloidal suspensions

Jean Comtet; Guillaume Chatté; Antoine Niguès; Lydéric Bocquet; Alessandro Siria; Annie Colin

The process by which sheared suspensions go through a dramatic change in viscosity is known as discontinuous shear thickening. Although well-characterized on the macroscale, the microscopic mechanisms at play in this transition are still poorly understood. Here, by developing new experimental procedures based on quartz-tuning fork atomic force microscopy, we measure the pairwise frictional profile between approaching pairs of polyvinyl chloride and cornstarch particles in solvent. We report a clear transition from a low-friction regime, where pairs of particles support a finite normal load, while interacting purely hydrodynamically, to a high-friction regime characterized by hard repulsive contact between the particles and sliding friction. Critically, we show that the normal stress needed to enter the frictional regime at nanoscale matches the critical stress at which shear thickening occurs for macroscopic suspensions. Our experiments bridge nano and macroscales and provide long needed demonstration of the role of frictional forces in discontinuous shear thickening.


Nature Materials | 2017

Nanoscale capillary freezing of ionic liquids confined between metallic interfaces and the role of electronic screening

Jean Comtet; Antoine Niguès; Vojtech Kaiser; Benoit Coasne; Lydéric Bocquet; Alessandro Siria

Room temperature Ionic liquids (RTIL) are new materials with fundamental importance for energy storage and active lubrication. They are unsual liquids, which challenge the classical frameworks of electrolytes, whose behavior at electrified interfaces remains elusive with exotic responses relevant to their electrochemical activity. By means of tuning fork based AFM nanorheological measurements, we explore here the properties of confined RTIL, unveiling a dramatic change of the RTIL towards a solid-like phase below a threshold thickness, pointing to capillary freezing in confinement. This threshold is related to the metallic nature of the confining materials, with more metallic surfaces facilitating freezing. This is interpreted in terms of the shift of freezing transition, taking into account the influence of the electronic screening on RTIL wetting of the confining surfaces. Our findings provide fresh views on the properties of confined RTIL with implications for their properties inside nanoporous metallic structures and suggests applications to tune nanoscale lubrication with phase-changing RTIL, by varying the nature and patterning of the substrate, and application of active polarisation.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Electron beam detection of a Nanotube Scanning Force Microscope

Alessandro Siria; Antoine Niguès

Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM) allows to probe matter at atomic scale by measuring the perturbation of a nanomechanical oscillator induced by near-field interaction forces. The quest to improve sensitivity and resolution of AFM forced the introduction of a new class of resonators with dimensions at the nanometer scale. In this context, nanotubes are the ultimate mechanical oscillators because of their one dimensional nature, small mass and almost perfect crystallinity. Coupled to the possibility of functionalisation, these properties make them the perfect candidates as ultra sensitive, on-demand force sensors. However their dimensions make the measurement of the mechanical properties a challenging task in particular when working in cavity free geometry at ambient temperature. By using a focused electron beam, we show that the mechanical response of nanotubes can be quantitatively measured while approaching to a surface sample. By coupling electron beam detection of individual nanotubes with a custom AFM we image the surface topography of a sample by continuously measuring the mechanical properties of the nanoresonators. The combination of very small size and mass together with the high resolution of the electron beam detection method offers unprecedented opportunities for the development of a new class of nanotube-based scanning force microscopy.


Nano Letters | 2017

Contact Dependence and Velocity Crossover in Friction between Microscopic Solid/Solid Contacts

Joshua D. McGraw; Antoine Niguès; Alexis Chennevière; Alessandro Siria

Friction at the nanoscale differs markedly from that between surfaces of macroscopic extent. Characteristically, the velocity dependence of friction between apparent solid/solid contacts can strongly deviate from the classically assumed velocity independence. Here, we show that a nondestructive friction between solid tips with radius on the scale of hundreds of nanometers and solid hydrophobic self-assembled monolayers has a strong velocity dependence. Specifically, using laterally oscillating quartz tuning forks, we observe a linear scaling in the velocity at the lowest accessed velocities, typically hundreds of micrometers per second, crossing over into a logarithmic velocity dependence. This crossover is consistent with a general multicontact friction model that includes thermally activated breaking of the contacts at subnanometric elongation. We find as well a strong dependence of the friction on the dimensions of the frictional probe.


Nature Materials | 2014

Ultrahigh interlayer friction in multiwalled boron nitride nanotubes

Antoine Niguès; Alessandro Siria; P. Vincent; P. Poncharal; Lydéric Bocquet


Soft Matter | 2018

Shear thinning in non-Brownian suspensions

Guillaume Chatté; Jean Comtet; Antoine Niguès; Lydéric Bocquet; Alessandro Siria; Guylaine Ducouret; François Lequeux; Nicolas Lenoir; Guillaume Ovarlez; Annie Colin


Journal of Fluid Mechanics | 2017

The Landau–Squire plume

Eleonora Secchi; Sophie Marbach; Antoine Niguès; Alessandro Siria; Lydéric Bocquet


Faraday Discussions | 2017

Electrostatic interactions between ions near Thomas–Fermi substrates and the surface energy of ionic crystals at imperfect metals

Vojtech Kaiser; Jean Comtet; Antoine Niguès; Alessandro Siria; Benoit Coasne; Lydéric Bocquet


Archive | 2017

Atomic Force Nanoscope

Alessandro Siria; Antoine Niguès

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Alessandro Siria

École Normale Supérieure

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Lydéric Bocquet

École Normale Supérieure

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Jean Comtet

École Normale Supérieure

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Vojtech Kaiser

École Normale Supérieure

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Annie Colin

University of Bordeaux

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Sophie Marbach

École Normale Supérieure

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Benoit Coasne

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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