Clément Guibert
University of Paris
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Featured researches published by Clément Guibert.
Angewandte Chemie | 2013
Thuy T T N'Guyen; Hien T. T. Duong; Johan Sebastian Basuki; Véronique Montembault; Sagrario Pascual; Clément Guibert; Jérôme Fresnais; Cyrille Boyer; Michael R. Whittaker; Thomas P. Davis; Laurent Fontaine
Click and drug: A combination of orthogonal click reactions is employed for the preparation of functional iron oxide nanoparticles (IONPs) that show unprecedented hyperthermia-induced drug release through a magnetically stimulated retro-Diels-Alder (rDA) process. Magnetic stimulation induces sufficient local energy in close proximity to the cycloadduct to initiate the rDA process
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2013
Benjamin T. Cheesman; Emelyn G. Smith; Timothy J. Murdoch; Clément Guibert; Grant B. Webber; Steve Edmondson; Erica J. Wanless
Polymer brushes are commonly used to modify the properties of solid surfaces. Here a family of polybasic poly(2-(diethylamino)ethyl methacrylate) brushes have been grown using ARGET ATRP from a cationic macroinitiator adsorbed on two types of silica surfaces: QCM crystals and oxidised silicon wafers. The pH-response of these brushes is investigated as a function of brush thickness in a constant flow environment in order to focus on the intrinsic dynamics of the polymer brushes. Independent QCM-D and in situ ellipsometry kinetic studies demonstrate the swelling process of protonation and solvent uptake is typically eight times faster than the corresponding neutralisation and solvent expulsion from the collapsing brush. However, the maximum rate of these processes is independent of brush thickness. The initial pH response of the brushes is hysteretic due to brush entanglement, which once overcome allows highly reversible pH-induced conformational changes. Multiple pH cycles demonstrate that the viscoelastic nature of the swollen state relative to the collapsed brush is independent of brush thickness.
Langmuir | 2010
Olesya Myakonkaya; Clément Guibert; Julian Eastoe; Isabelle Grillo
Here is demonstrated a novel approach to reversible control over nanoparticle (NP) stability, permitting facile recovery for the reuse of inorganic NPs. For the first time, the separation of NPs is achieved by suspending the nanostructures in a background-supporting colloidal fluid, which itself shows a liquid-liquid critical-type phase transition at a temperature T(c) instead of using a normal molecular solvent.
Angewandte Chemie | 2017
M Fernandez Castano Romera; Rpm Rene Lafleur; Clément Guibert; Ilja K. Voets; C Kees Storm; Rint P. Sijbesma
Abstract Biomimetic, strain‐stiffening materials are reported, made through self‐assembly and covalent fixation of small building blocks to form fibrous hydrogels that are able to stiffen by an order of magnitude in response to applied stress. The gels consist of semi‐flexible rodlike micelles of bisurea bolaamphiphiles with oligo(ethylene oxide) (EO) outer blocks and a polydiacetylene (PDA) backbone. The micelles are fibers, composed of 9–10 ribbons. A gelation method based on Cu‐catalyzed azide–alkyne cycloaddition (CuAAC), was developed and shown to lead to strain‐stiffening hydrogels with unusual, yet universal, linear and nonlinear stress–strain response. Upon gelation, the X‐ray scattering profile is unchanged, suggesting that crosslinks are formed at random positions along the fiber contour without fiber bundling. The work expands current knowledge about the design principles and chemistries needed to achieve fully synthetic, biomimetic soft matter with on‐demand, targeted mechanical properties.
Journal of Colloid and Interface Science | 2015
Clément Guibert; Vincent Dupuis; Jérôme Fresnais; Véronique Peyre
HYPOTHESIS Getting colloidally stable dispersions of nanoparticles in ionic liquids is a challenging task. Indeed, long-range electrostatic repulsions often involved in molecular solvents are screened in ionic liquids and cannot counterbalance the interparticle attractions. Using a polyelectrolyte coating should provide a good stabilisation of the nanoparticles. Investigating the role of the polyelectrolyte charge on the dispersion state should yield to a better comprehension of the stabilisation mechanisms. EXPERIMENTS Polyacrylate coated maghemite nanoparticles were transferred from water to ethylammonium nitrate, a protic ionic liquid, for various polymer chain length and nanoparticles size. Titrations of coated nanoparticles and of free polymer chains were performed in water and in ethylammonium nitrate. The dispersion state of the nanoparticles was monitored at different pH by small-angle X-ray scattering. FINDINGS Polyacrylate coating stabilised the nanoparticles in ethylammonium nitrate. However, reversible aggregation with the pH was observed. Surprisingly, this control was not directly related to the surface charge like in water but to the solvent quality for the polyelectrolyte. This study is the first report on the use of the pH to tune the dispersion state of nanoparticles in an ionic liquid. It provides a better understanding of the mechanisms responsible for colloidal stability in ionic liquids.
RSC Advances | 2016
Bruno Leonardo Caetano; Clément Guibert; Rodolfo Fini; Jérôme Fresnais; Sandra Helena Pulcinelli; Christine Ménager; Celso Valentim Santilli
A multifunctional material suitable for cancer therapy, which combines stimuli-responsive properties for drug delivery and magnetic hyperthermia prepared by a one-pot sol–gel synthesis from the conjugation of ureasil cross-linked poly(ethylene oxide) (U-PEO) hybrid materials with superparamagnetic nanoparticles (γ-Fe2O3), is reported in this communication.
Journal of Colloid and Interface Science | 2018
Ryo Kanzaki; Clément Guibert; Jérôme Fresnais; Véronique Peyre
HYPOTHESIS Ionic liquids (ILs) are extremely concentrated electrolyte solutions. The ubiquitous presence of ions induces specific behaviors for chemical reactions compared to reactions in water solutions. This is also the case for the stability of colloidal dispersions, for which the DLVO model cannot be applied as the ionic strength is out of the model range. In a previous work, in the protic IL ethylammonium nitrate (doi: https://doi.org//10.1016/j.jcis.2015.04.059), we observed an unexpected influence of the pH on the stability of dispersion of maghemite nanoparticles coated with poly(acrylic acid) (pAA). EXPERIMENTS To clarify and generalize these observations, we investigated here the pH response of the dispersion in a second protic ionic liquid with a different acid-base nature, diethylethanolammonium trifluoromethanesulfonate. pH titrations of the dispersions were achieved with an IS-FET electrode and the associated thermodynamic constants determined. The colloid structural properties were examined by small angle X-ray scattering. FINDINGS Under acidic or mildly basic condition, a stable dispersion was obtained, i.e., when the degree of dissociation of pAA, α, was α < 0.1 or α > 0.7. Dispersions form quite dense but reversible aggregates in the intermediate α range. A model for the solvation layer around the particles is proposed and generalizes the former findings.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2018
Nicholas M. Matsumoto; René P. M. Lafleur; Xianwen Lou; Kuo-Chih Shih; Sjors P. W. Wijnands; Clément Guibert; Johannes W. A. M. van Rosendaal; Ilja K. Voets; Anja R. A. Palmans; Yao Lin; E. W. Meijer
In biology, polymorphism is a well-known phenomenon by which a discrete biomacromolecule can adopt multiple specific conformations in response to its environment. The controlled incorporation of polymorphism into noncovalent aqueous assemblies of synthetic small molecules is an important step toward the development of bioinspired responsive materials. Herein, we report on a family of carboxylic acid functionalized water-soluble benzene-1,3,5-tricarboxamides (BTAs) that self-assemble in water to form one-dimensional fibers, membranes, and hollow nanotubes. Interestingly, one of the BTAs with the optimized position of the carboxylic group in the hydrophobic domain yields nanotubes that undergo reversible temperature-dependent dynamic reorganizations. SAXS and Cryo-TEM data show the formation of elongated, well-ordered nanotubes at elevated temperatures. At these temperatures, increased dynamics, as measured by hydrogen–deuterium exchange, provide enough flexibility to the system to form well-defined nanotube structures with apparently defect-free tube walls. Without this flexibility, the assemblies are frozen into a variety of structures that are very similar at the supramolecular level, but less defined at the mesoscopic level.
Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2015
Clément Guibert; Vincent Dupuis; Véronique Peyre; Jérôme Fresnais
Chemical Communications | 2008
Matthias Blug; Clément Guibert; Xavier-Frédéric Le Goff; Nicolas Mézailles; Pascal Le Floch