Etienne Duguet
Centre national de la recherche scientifique
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Publication
Featured researches published by Etienne Duguet.
Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2004
Stéphane Mornet; Sébastien Vasseur; Fabien Grasset; Etienne Duguet
Magnetic nanoparticles have attracted attention because of their current and potential usefulness as contrast agents for magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) or colloidal mediators for cancer magnetic hyperthermia. This review examines these in vivo applications through an understanding of the involved problems and the current and future possibilities for resolving them. A special emphasis is made on magnetic nanoparticle requirements from a physical viewpoint (e.g. relaxivity for MRI and specific absorption rate for hyperthermia), the factors affecting their biodistribution (e.g. size, surface hydrophobic/hydrophilic balance, etc.) and the solutions envisaged for enhancing their half-life in the blood compartment and targeting tumour cells.
Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2005
Adeline Perro; Stéphane Reculusa; Serge Ravaine; Elodie Bourgeat-Lami; Etienne Duguet
Because the Roman god Janus was usually represented with two heads placed back to back, the term Janus is used for the description of particles whose surfaces of both hemispheres are different from a chemical point of view. So, they could be used as building blocks for supraparticular assemblies, as dual-functionalized devices, as particular surfactants if one hemisphere is hydrophilic and the other hydrophobic, etc. If they could allow the segregation of negative charges on one hemisphere and positive charges on the other one, they would display a giant dipole moment allowing their remote positioning by rotation in an electric field as a function of field polarity. This review deals with the great and imaginative efforts which were devoted to the synthesis of Janus particles in the last fifteen years. A special emphasis is made on scalable techniques and on those which apply to the preparation of Janus particles in the nanometer range. Specific properties and applications of Janus particles are discussed.
Nanomedicine: Nanotechnology, Biology and Medicine | 2006
Etienne Duguet; Sébastien Vasseur; Stéphane Mornet; Jean-Marie Devoisselle
Magnetic nanoparticles have attracted attention in modern medicine and pharmacology owing to their potential usefulness as contrast agents for MRI, as colloidal mediators for cancer magnetic hyperthermia or as active constituents of drug-delivery platforms. This review examines these in vivo applications through an understanding of the involved problems and the current and future possibilities for resolving them. A special emphasis is placed upon magnetic nanoparticle requirements from a physical viewpoint (e.g., relaxivity for MRI, specific absorption rate for hyperthermia and magnetic guidance), the factors affecting their biodistribution after intravenous injection (e.g., size and surface hydrophobic/hydrophilic balance) and the solutions envisaged for enhancing their half-life in the blood compartment and in targeting tumor cells.
Journal of Materials Chemistry | 1997
Maher Abboud; Michelle Turner; Etienne Duguet; Michel Fontanille
Polymerisable organic silane molecules [3-(trimethoxysilyl)propyl methacrylate, γ-MPS] have been grafted onto the surface of ceramic oxide powders (Al 2 O 3 , ZrO 2 , TiO 2 ), via hydroxy groups of the latter oxides, in order to obtain organic–inorganic hybrid ‘macromonomers’. Densities of surface hydroxy groups have been determined using thermogravimetry (TG) and chemical titration. Quantification of γ-MPS grafting has been determined by FTIR spectroscopy, elemental analysis and TG. Typical grafting yields up to 6 µmol m -2 were obtained. The influence of the relative amount of silane used has been studied. Silane multilayers and/or aggregates are formed as observed in 29 Si CP MAS NMR spectroscopy.
Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2007
Beatriz Julián-López; Cédric Boissière; Corinne Chanéac; David Grosso; Sébastien Vasseur; Sylvain Miraux; Etienne Duguet; Clément Sanchez
We report facile fabrication of advanced hybrid silica–spinel iron oxide (maghemite) composite microspheres built with both superparamagnetic nanoparticles for MR imaging, hyperthermia, and a hybrid mesoporous matrix enabling the transport of bioactive molecules for in vivo biomedical applications. Elaboration of such multifunctional platforms is performed by spray drying a sol of tunable composition that allows one to control the size and amount of magnetic particles embedded in the matrix, without aggregation, and to adjust the size and the surface chemical properties of the porous silica cavities. The resulting nanocomposites (γ-Fe2O3 8 nm particles in silica matrices from TEOS templated by CTAB or P123, without or with functionalisation with –Ph, –SH or –NH2) were characterised by chemical analysis, XRD, TEM, BET, FTIR and magnetisation measurements. Tests of the materials both as MRI T2-contrast agents and as heating sources of hyperthermia are presented in support of potential applications in diagnosis and therapy.
Journal of Alloys and Compounds | 2003
Fabien Grasset; Noriko Saito; Di Li; Dae-Chul Park; Isao Sakaguchi; Naoki Ohashi; Hajime Haneda; Thierry Roisnel; Stéphane Mornet; Etienne Duguet
Commercial zinc oxide nanoparticles (20–30 nm) were coated by aminopropyltriethoxysilane (APTES) under varying environments. Three different processes, acidic, basic and toluene were used. The effects of coating conditions (acidic, basic and toluene) on the grafting, structural and optical properties of these nanoparticles were studied. In the three cases, it was possible to control the coating and according to X-ray diffraction, BET, TEM and SEM results, it is clear that the APTES coating plays a role of growth inhibitor even at 800 °C...
Gold Bulletin | 2008
Jérôme Majimel; Stéphane Mornet; Etienne Duguet; Serge Ravaine
Non-spherical gold nanoparticles such as rods (short, long) (1,2), wires, cubes (3), nanocages (4), (multi-)concentric shells (5), triangular prisms (6–7), as well as other more exotic structures such as hollow tubes, capsules (6), even branched nanocrystals (8–9) have garnered significant research attention in the past few years. They exhibit unique and fine-tuned properties which either strongly differ or are more pronounced from those of symmetric, spherical gold nanoparticles. Their unusual optical and electronic properties, improved mechanical properties and specific surface-enhanced spectroscopies make them ideal structures for emerging applications in photonics, electronics, optical sensing and imaging, biomedical labelling and sensing, catalysis and electronic devices among others (10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18). Furthermore, some of these anisotropic nanoparticles enable elucidation of the particle growth mechanism, which in turn makes it possible to predict and systematically manipulate the final nanocrystal morphology (8,19-20). Finally, these anisotropic gold nanomaterials provide templates for further generation of novel materials (21,22).This article provides an overview of current research in the area of anisotropic gold nanoparticles. We begin by outlining key properties that they possess; we then describe how to control their morphology. Some of the most innovative synthetic strategies are highlighted together with an emphasis on recent results from our laboratories as well as future perspectives for anisotropic gold nanoparticles as novel materials.
Small | 2015
Ji Liu; Christophe Detrembleur; Marie-Claire De Pauw-Gillet; Stéphane Mornet; Christine Jérôme; Etienne Duguet
In this study, we report the synthesis of a nanoscaled drug delivery system, which is composed of a gold nanorod-like core and a mesoporous silica shell (GNR@MSNP) and partially uploaded with phase-changing molecules (1-tetradecanol, TD, T(m) 39 °C) as gatekeepers, as well as its ability to regulate the release of doxorubicin (DOX). Indeed, a nearly zero premature release is evidenced at physiological temperature (37 °C), whereas the DOX release is efficiently achieved at higher temperature not only upon external heating, but also via internal heating generated by the GNR core under near infrared irradiation. When tagged with folate moieties, GNR@MSNPs target specifically to KB cells, which are known to overexpress the folate receptors. Such a precise control over drug release, combining with the photothermal effect of GNR cores, provides promising opportunity for localized synergistic photothermal ablation and chemotherapy. Moreover, the performance in killing the targeted cancer cells is more efficient compared with the single phototherapeutic modality of GNR@MSNPs. This versatile combination of local heating, phototherapeutics, chemotherapeutics and gating components opens up the possibilities for designing multifunctional drug delivery systems.
Journal of Colloid and Interface Science | 2010
Tanguy Aubert; Fabien Grasset; Stéphane Mornet; Etienne Duguet; Olivier Cador; Stéphane Cordier; Yann Molard; Valérie Demange; Michel Mortier; Hajime Haneda
Water-in-oil (W/O) microemulsion is a well-suitable confined reacting medium for the synthesis of structured functional nanoparticles of controlled size and shape. During the last decade, it allowed the synthesis of multi-functional silica nanoparticles with morphologies as various as core-shell, homogenous dispersion or both together. The morphology and properties of the different intermediates and final materials obtained through this route are discussed in the light of UV-Vis-NIR spectroscopy, dynamic light scattering (DLS) and X-ray diffraction (XRD), transmission electron microscopy (TEM), scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and magnetometer SQUID analysis.
Angewandte Chemie | 2009
Adeline Perro; Etienne Duguet; Olivier Lambert; Jean-Christophe Taveau; Elodie Bourgeat-Lami; Serge Ravaine
A non-exhaustive list of fields in which extensive research has been dedicated to colloidal particles during the past century includes condensed matter physics, biology, optics, materials science, and chemistry. Both our current understanding of various physical phenomena and our capability to fabricate new functional materials have been considerably enriched by the development of synthetic strategies that are capable of generating copious quantities of colloidal entities of good size uniformity. Nevertheless, most of the available monodisperse colloidal materials are spherical, as the minimization of the interfacial free energy strongly drives a particle to adopt such a shape. [1] This strongly limits the number of new structures which can be engineered by using these colloids as building blocks. For instance, the crystallization of spherical colloids into three-dimensional periodic lattices has recently allowed the emergence of a very active field of research—photonic colloidal crystals, known as artificial opals. Nevertheless, the light diffraction properties of these crystals are rather limited because of their face-centered cubic lattice, which results from the packing of spheres. It has been predicted that crystals with a lower degree of symmetry, such as the diamond lattice, can exhibit a full photonic bandgap. To build such photonic crystals, well-defined colloids with nonspherical shapes are required. Van Blaaderen recently introduced the elegant term of “colloidal molecules”, [2] which takes into account that spherical colloids can be treated as if they were atoms and that molecules can form more complex materials than can atoms. Therefore, the reproducible fabrication of large amounts of colloids that have a good uniformity in