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Dive into the research topics where Isabelle Bihannic is active.

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Featured researches published by Isabelle Bihannic.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006

Liquid–crystalline aqueous clay suspensions

Laurent J. Michot; Isabelle Bihannic; Solange Maddi; Sérgio S. Funari; Christophe Baravian; Pierre Levitz; Patrick Davidson

This article demonstrates the occurrence of a true isotropic/nematic transition in colloidal Brownian aqueous suspensions of natural nontronite clay. The liquid–crystalline character is further evidenced by polarized light microscopy and small-angle x-ray scattering experiments in the presence and absence of modest external magnetic fields. The complete phase diagram ionic strength/volume fraction then exhibits a clear biphasic domain in the sol region just before the gel transition in contrast with the situation observed for other swelling clays in which the sol/gel transition hinders the isotropic/nematic transition. Small-angle x-ray scattering measurements of gel samples reveal strong positional and orientational orders of the particles, proving unambiguously the nematic character of the gel and, thus, clearly refuting the still prevalent “house of cards” model, which explains the gel structure by means of attractive interactions between clay platelets. Such order also is observed in various other swelling clay minerals; therefore, this very general behavior must be taken into account to reach a better understanding of the rheological properties and phase behavior of these systems.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2009

Liquid-crystalline nematic phase in aqueous suspensions of a disk-shaped natural beidellite clay.

Erwan Paineau; K. Antonova; Christophe Baravian; Isabelle Bihannic; Patrick Davidson; Ivan Dozov; Marianne Impéror-Clerc; Pierre Levitz; A. Madsen; Florian Meneau; Laurent J. Michot

After size-selection and osmotic pressure measurements at fixed ionic strength, the behavior of aqueous colloidal suspensions of anisotropic disklike beidellite clay particles has been investigated by combining optical observations under polarized light, rheological, and small angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) experiments. The obtained phase diagrams (volume fraction/ionic strength) reveal, for ionic strength below 10(-3) M/L, a first-order isotropic/nematic (I/N) phase transition before gel formation at low volume fractions, typically around 0.5%. This I/N transition line displays a positive slope for increasing ionic strength and shifts toward lower volume fraction with increasing particle size, confirming that the system is controlled by repulsive interactions. The swelling laws, derived from the interparticle distances obtained by SAXS, display a transition from isotropic swelling at low volume fractions to lamellar swelling at higher volume fractions. The liquid-crystal properties have then been investigated in detail. Highly aligned nematic samples can be obtained in three different ways, by applying a magnetic field, an ac electric field, and by spontaneous homeotropic anchoring on surfaces. The birefringence of the fluid nematic phase is negative with typical values around 5 x 10(-4) at a volume fraction of about 0.6%. High nematic order parameters have been obtained as expected for well-aligned samples. The nematic director is aligned parallel to the magnetic field and perpendicular to the electric field.


Langmuir | 2011

Aqueous suspensions of natural swelling clay minerals. 1. Structure and electrostatic interactions.

Erwan Paineau; Isabelle Bihannic; Christophe Baravian; Adrian-Marie Philippe; Patrick Davidson; Pierre Levitz; Sérgio S. Funari; Cyrille Rochas; Laurent J. Michot

In this article, we present a general overview of the organization of colloidal charged clay particles in aqueous suspension by studying different natural samples with different structural charges and charge locations. Small-angle X-ray scattering experiments (SAXS) are first used to derive swelling laws that demonstrate the almost perfect exfoliation of clay sheets in suspension. Using a simple approach based on geometrical constraints, we show that these swelling laws can be fully modeled on the basis of morphological parameters only. The validity of this approach was further extended to other clay data from the literature, in particular, synthetic Laponite. For all of the investigated samples, experimental osmotic pressures can be properly described by a Poisson-Boltzmann approach for ionic strength up to 10(-3) M, which reveals that these systems are dominated by repulsive electrostatic interactions. However, a detailed analysis of the Poisson-Boltzmann treatment shows differences in the repulsive potential strength that are not directly linked to the structural charge of the minerals but rather to the charge location in the structure for tetrahedrally charged clays (beidellite and nontronites) undergoing stronger electrostatic repulsions than octahedrally charged samples (montmorillonites, laponite). Only minerals subjected to the strongest electrostatic repulsions present a true isotropic to nematic phase transition in their phase diagrams. The influence of ionic repulsions on the local order of clay platelets was then analyzed through a detailed investigation of the structure factors of the various clay samples. It appears that stronger electrostatic repulsions improve the liquidlike positional local order.


Langmuir | 2009

Sol−Gel and Isotropic/Nematic Transitions in Aqueous Suspensions of Natural Nontronite Clay. Influence of Particle Anisotropy. 2. Gel Structure and Mechanical Properties

Laurent J. Michot; Christophe Baravian; Isabelle Bihannic; Solange Maddi; Christian Moyne; Jérôme F. L. Duval; Pierre Levitz; Patrick Davidson

After size-selection, the phase behavior of aqueous suspensions of nontronite clay was analyzed by osmotic pressure measurements, rheological experiments, and small-angle X-ray scattering. All the measurements confirm that for ionic strength < or =10(-3) M/L, the system is purely repulsive. By combining results from osmotic pressure measurements and X-ray scattering, it appears that the pressure of the system can be well-described using a simple Poisson-Boltzmann treatment based on the interaction between charged infinite parallel planes. In terms of rheological properties, even if the status of the sol/gel transition remains partially unclear as the number density of particles at the sol-gel transition exhibits a -2 power dependence with average particle size, the yield stress and elasticity of the gels can be easily renormalized for all particle sizes on the basis of the volume of the particles. Furthermore, rheological modeling of the flow curves shows that for all the particles, an approach based on excluded volume effects captures most features of nontronite suspensions. Still, the high shear flow properties of the suspensions that reveal a strong orientation of particles in the flow are affected by electrostatic interactions. This study then shows that the rich phase behavior of clay minerals, notably the fact that some clay minerals display an isotropic/nematic transition while others exhibit a sol-gel transition, requires a full understanding of all the interactions in the system that can only be achieved by working on well-characterized size-selected samples.


Langmuir | 2008

Sol/gel and isotropic/nematic transitions in aqueous suspensions of natural nontronite clay. Influence of particle anisotropy. 1. Features of the i/n transition.

Laurent J. Michot; Isabelle Bihannic; Solange Maddi; Christophe Baravian; Pierre Levitz; Patrick Davidson

The phase behavior of a natural nontronite clay was studied for size-selected particles by combining osmotic pressure measurements, visual observations under polarized light, and rheological experiments. In parallel, the positional and orientational correlations of the particles were analyzed by small-angle X-ray scattering. Aqueous suspensions of nontronite exhibit a true isotropic/nematic (I/N) transition that occurs before the sol/gel transition, for ionic strengths below 10(-3) M/L. In this region of the phase diagrams, the system appears to be purely repulsive. The I/N transition shifts toward lower volume fractions for increasing particle anisotropy, and its position in the phase diagram agrees well with the theoretical predictions for platelets. SAXS measurements reveal the presence of characteristic interparticular distances in the isotropic, nematic, and gel phases. The swelling law (separation distance vs swelling law) exhibits two regimes. For high volume fractions, the swelling law is one-dimensional as in layered systems and reveals the presence of isolated platelets. At lower volume fraction, distances scale as phi(-1/3), indicating isotropic volumic swelling. Finally, the experimental osmotic pressure curves can be satisfactorily reproduced by considering the interparticle distances between two charged planes whose effective charge is around 10% of the structural charge.


Langmuir | 2011

Aqueous suspensions of natural swelling clay minerals. 2. Rheological characterization.

Erwan Paineau; Laurent J. Michot; Isabelle Bihannic; Christophe Baravian

We report in this article a comprehensive investigation of the viscoelastic behavior of different natural colloidal clay minerals in aqueous solution. Rheological experiments were carried out under both dynamic and steady-state conditions, allowing us to derive the elasticity and yield stress. Both parameters can be renormalized for all sizes, ionic strength, and type of clay using in a first approach only the volume of the particles. However, applying such a treatment to various clays of similar shapes and sizes yields differences that can be linked to the repulsion strength and charge location in the swelling clays. The stronger the repulsive interactions, the better the orientation of clay particles in flows. In addition, a master linear relationship between the elasticity and yield stress whose value corresponds to a critical deformation of 0.1 was evidenced. Such a relationship may be general for any colloidal suspension of anisometric particles as revealed by the analysis of various experimental data obtained on either disk-shaped or lath- and rod-shaped particles. The particle size dependence of the sol-gel transition was also investigated in detail. To understand why suspensions of larger particles gel at a higher volume fraction, we propose a very simplified view based on the statistical hydrodynamic trapping of a particle by an another one in its neighborhood upon translation and during a short period of time. We show that the key parameter describing this hydrodynamic trapping varies as the cube of the average diameter and captures most features of the sol-gel transition. Finally, we pointed out that in the high shear limit the suspension viscosity is still closely related to electrostatic interactions and follows the same trends as the viscoelastic properties.


American Mineralogist | 2005

Hydration and swelling of synthetic Na-saponites: Influence of layer charge

Laurent J. Michot; Isabelle Bihannic; Manuel Pelletier; Emmanuel Rinnert; Jean-Louis Robert

Abstract This paper concerns the hydration and swelling behavior of four synthetic sodium saponite samples with general formula Nax(Si4-x,Alx)(Mg3)O10(OH)2, where x = 0.4, 0.5, 0.6, and 0.7. The combination of gravimetric water adsorption measurements and X-ray diffraction experiments under controlled water pressure allows us to analyze the influence of layer charge on swelling mechanisms. When the layer charge increases, swelling occurs for lower values of the chemical potential, i.e., at lower relative pressure. In parallel, as the cohesion between layers increases with increasing layer charge, a greater amount of water is needed to initiate swelling for higher-charged samples. In this last case, due to the proximity of interlayer cations, the transition between the one layer and two-layer hydrate occurs before the sodium cations are surrounded by a complete hydration sphere. This study also shows that the “one-layer” or “two-layer” hydrates cannot be considered as defined states as they appear to be modified with both layer charge and relative pressure.


American Mineralogist | 2012

Morphological quantification of hierarchical geomaterials by X-ray nano-CT bridges the gap from nano to micro length scales

Sébastien Brisard; Rosie S. Chae; Isabelle Bihannic; Laurent J. Michot; Peter Guttmann; J. Thieme; Gerd Schneider; Paulo J.M. Monteiro; Pierre Levitz

Abstract Morphological quantification of the complex structure of hierarchical geomaterials is of great relevance for Earth science and environmental engineering, among others. To date, methods that quantify the 3D morphology on length scales ranging from a few tens of nanometers to several hundred nanometers have had limited success. We demonstrate, for the first time, that it is possible to go beyond visualization and to extract quantitative morphological information from X-ray images in the aforementioned length scales. As examples, two different hierarchical geomaterials exhibiting complex porous structures ranging from nanometer to macroscopic scale are studied: a flocculated clay water suspension and two hydrated cement pastes. We show that from a single projection image it is possible to perform a direct computation of the ultra-small angle-scattering spectra. The predictions matched very well the experimental data obtained by the best ultra-small angle-scattering experimental setups as observed for the cement paste. In this context, we demonstrate that the structure of flocculated clay suspension exhibit two well-distinct regimes of aggregation, a dense mass fractal aggregation at short distance and a more open structure at large distance, which can be generated by a 3D reaction limited cluster-cluster aggregation process. For the first time, a high-resolution 3D image of fibrillar cement paste cluster was obtained from limited angle nanotomography.


Journal of Colloid and Interface Science | 2009

Adsorption of polyamine on clay minerals.

C. Blachier; Laurent J. Michot; Isabelle Bihannic; Odile Barres; Alain Jacquet; Martin Mosquet

This work aims at a better understanding of the interaction between a polycationic quaternary amine polymer (F25) and three different clay minerals: montmorillonite, illite, and kaolinite. For this, adsorption isotherms of F25 on the clay surfaces were measured together with the evolution of the CEC along the isotherm, which revealed that cation exchange plays an important role in the adsorption process. These first results were confirmed by XRD measurements on dried powders that are evidence in the case of montmorillonite of the presence of polymer in the interlayer spaces. In addition, the evolution of the short range structure of clay minerals suspensions on polymer adsorption was followed by WAXS experiments. Polymer intercalation was observed while the structure of the resulting stacking appeared to change slightly along the polymer adsorption isotherm. Diffuse reflectance infrared measurements revealed that significant conformational changes occur on polymer adsorption onto montmorillonite surfaces. Furthermore, adsorption above the CEC is observed which involves a charge reversal of clay mineral surfaces, the zero charge being reached for an adsorbed amount corresponding to the CEC. Finally, flocculation was discussed compared to adsorption amounts and zeta potential measurements, confirming that optimum flocculation concentration is reached for noncharged particles.


Langmuir | 2013

Coagulation of Na-montmorillonite by inorganic cations at neutral pH. A combined transmission X-ray microscopy, small angle and wide angle X-ray scattering study.

Laurent J. Michot; Isabelle Bihannic; Fabien Thomas; Bruno Lartiges; Yves Waldvogel; Céline Caillet; Juergen Thieme; Sérgio S. Funari; Pierre Levitz

The coagulation of sodium montmorillonite by inorganic salts (NaNO3, Ca(NO3)2 and La(NO3)3) was studied by combining classical turbidity measurements with wide-angle-X-ray scattering (WAXS), small-angle-X-ray scattering (SAXS), and transmission X-ray microscopy (TXM). Using size-selected samples, such a combination, associated with an original quantitative treatment of TXM images, provides a true multiscale investigation of the formed structures in a spatial range extending from a few ångstroms to a few micrometers. We then show that, at neutral pH and starting with fully Na-exchanged samples, coagulation proceeds via the formation of stacks of particles with a slight mismatch between layers. These stacks arrange themselves into larger porous anisotropic particles, the porosity of which depends on the valence of the cation used for coagulation experiments. Face-face coagulation is clearly dominant under those conditions, and no evidence for significant face-edge coagulation was found. These structures appear to arrange as larger clusters, the organization of which should control the mechanical properties of the flocs.

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Florian Meneau

European Synchrotron Radiation Facility

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