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Dive into the research topics where Pascal Panizza is active.

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Featured researches published by Pascal Panizza.


Lab on a Chip | 2013

Passive breakups of isolated drops and one-dimensional assemblies of drops in microfluidic geometries: experiments and models

Louis Salkin; Alexandre Schmit; Laurent Courbin; Pascal Panizza

Using two different geometries, rectangular obstacles and asymmetric loops, we investigate the breakup dynamics of deformable objects, such as drops and bubbles, confined in microfluidic devices. We thoroughly study two distinct flow configurations that depend on whether object-to-object hydrodynamic interactions are allowed. When such interactions are introduced, we find that the volumes of the daughter objects created after breakup solely depend on the geometrical features of the devices and are not affected by the hydrodynamic and physicochemical variables; these results are in sharp contrast with those obtained for non-interacting objects. For both configurations, we provide simple phenomenological models that capture well the experimental findings and predict the evolution of the volumes of the daughter objects with the controlling dimensionless quantities that are identified. We introduce a mean-field approximation, which permits accounting for the interactions between objects during breakup and we discuss its conditions of validity.


Soft Matter | 2011

Droplet traffic regulated by collisions in microfluidic networks

Malika Belloul; Laurent Courbin; Pascal Panizza

We study droplet traffic at the inlet node of an asymmetric microfluidic loop. We observe that collisions between successive droplets may occur at the junction. We show that this phenomenon has an impact on the repartition of the droplets in the arms of the loop since it modifies the nature of the collective hydrodynamic feedback mechanism that usually regulates traffic. We present a robust indirect method to measure the excess hydrodynamic resistance added by each droplet to a microfluidic channel, and we rationalize our experimental finding using simple physical arguments.


RSC Advances | 2014

A pendant drop method for the production of calibrated double emulsions and emulsion gels

Alexandre Schmit; Laurent Courbin; Mélanie Marquis; Denis Renard; Pascal Panizza

We describe a pendant drop method that allows one to produce double emulsions in a controllable way. Using a co-flowing drop-maker, we generate a periodic train made of monodisperse droplets that is directed toward the end of a capillary tube where a pendant drop forms. When this drop detaches from the tip of the capillary under the influence of gravity, it may or may not encapsulate one or several droplets depending on experimental conditions. We discuss the advantages of this method when compared with other techniques described in the literature and we present a simple model that predicts well the mean volume of the outer drops and the mean number of encapsulated droplets per drop as a function of the various physical parameters at play in experiments. We illustrate the high potentiality of this simple method by producing well-calibrated emulsion gels of large sizes and we discuss possible applications.


Physical Review Letters | 2016

Generating Soap Bubbles by Blowing on Soap Films

Louis Salkin; Alexandre Schmit; Pascal Panizza; Laurent Courbin

Making soap bubbles by blowing air on a soap film is an enjoyable activity, yet a poorly understood phenomenon. Working either with circular bubble wands or long-lived vertical soap films having an adjustable steady state thickness, we investigate the formation of such bubbles when a gas is blown through a nozzle onto a film. We vary film size, nozzle radius, space between the film and nozzle, and gas density, and we measure the gas velocity threshold above which bubbles are formed. The response is sensitive to containment, i.e., the ratio between film and jet sizes, and dissipation in the turbulent gas jet, which is a function of the distance from the film to the nozzle. We rationalize the observed four different regimes by comparing the dynamic pressure exerted by the jet on the film and the Laplace pressure needed to create the curved surface of a bubble. This simple model allows us to account for the interplay between hydrodynamic, physicochemical, and geometrical factors.


Soft Matter | 2014

Commensurability-driven structural defects in double emulsions produced with two-step microfluidic techniques

Alexandre Schmit; Louis Salkin; Laurent Courbin; Pascal Panizza

The combination of two drop makers such as flow focusing geometries or ┬ junctions is commonly used in microfluidics to fabricate monodisperse double emulsions and novel fluid-based materials. Here we investigate the physics of the encapsulation of small droplets inside large drops that is at the core of such processes. The number of droplets per drop studied over time for large sequences of consecutive drops reveals that the dynamics of these systems are complex: we find a succession of well-defined elementary patterns and defects. We present a simple model based on a discrete approach that predicts the nature of these patterns and their non-trivial scheme of arrangement in a sequence as a function of the ratio of the two timescales of the problem, the production times of droplets and drops. Experiments validate our model as they concur very well with predictions.


Proceedings of SPIE, the International Society for Optical Engineering | 2010

Microfluidics and thin-film processes: a recipe for organic integrated photonics based on 3D microresonators

Nolwenn Huby; David Pluchon; Malika Belloul; Alain Moréac; Nathalie Coulon; Etienne Gaviot; Pascal Panizza; Bruno Bêche

We report on the design and realization of photonic integrated devices based on 3D organic microresonators. This has been achieved by combining microfluidics techniques and thin-film processes. The microfluidic device and the control of the flow rates of the continuous and dispersed phases allow the fabrication of organic microresonators with diameter ranging from 30 to 200 μm. The resonance of the sphere in air has been first investigated by using the Raman spectroscopy set-up demonstrating the appropriate photonic properties. Then the microresonators have been integrated on an organic chip made of the photosensitive resin SU-8 and positioned at the extremity of a taper and alongside a rib waveguide. The realization of these structures by thin-film processes needs one step UV-lithography leading to 6μm width and 30μm height. Both devices have proved the efficient evanescent coupling leading to the excitation of the whispering gallery modes confined at the surface of the organic 3D microresonators. Finally, a band-stop filter has been used to detect the resonance spectra of the resonators once integrated.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2009

Spin coating and plasma process for 2.5D and hybrid 3D micro-resonators on multilayer polymers

Bruno Bêche; Etienne Gaviot; Christian Godet; Abdelkader Zebda; Arnaud Potel; Jérémy Barbe; Lionel Camberlein; Véronique Vié; Pascal Panizza; Goulc'hen Loas; Cyril Hamel; Joseph Zyss; Nolwenn Huby

We have designed and realized three integrated photonic families of micro-resonators (MR) on multilayer organic materials. Such so-called 2.5D-MR and 3D-MR structures show off radius values ranging from 40 to 200μm. Both first and second families are especially designed on organic multilayer materials and shaped as ring- and disk-MR organics structures arranged upon (and coupled with) a pair of SU8-organic waveguides. The third family is related to hybrid 3D-MR structures composed of spherical glass-MR coupled to organic waveguides by a Langmuir-Blodgett lipid film about three nanometers in thickness. At first, polymer spin coating, surface plasma treatment and selective UV-lithography processes have been developed to realize 2.5D photonic micro-resonators. Secondly, we have designed and characterized photonic-quadripoles made of 3D-glass-MR arranged upon a pair of SU8 waveguides. Such structures are defined by a 4-ports or 4-waveguides coupled by the spherical glass-MR. We have achieved an evanescent photonic coupling between the 3D-MR and the 4-ports structure. Spectral resonances have been measured for 4-whispering gallery-modes (WGM) into such 3D-structures respectively characterized by a 0.97 nm free spectral range (FSR) and a high quality Q-factor up to 4.104.


Current Opinion in Colloid and Interface Science | 2008

Controlled production of emulsions and particles by milli- and microfluidic techniques☆

Wilfried Engl; Rénal Backov; Pascal Panizza


Lab on a Chip | 2011

Millifluidic droplet analyser for microbiology

Larysa Baraban; Fabien Bertholle; Merijn L. M. Salverda; Nicolas Bremond; Pascal Panizza; Jean Baudry; J. Arjan G. M. de Visser; Jérôme Bibette


Physical Review E | 2009

Droplet motion in microfluidic networks: Hydrodynamic interactions and pressure-drop measurements.

D. A. Sessoms; Malika Belloul; W. Engl; M. Roche; Laurent Courbin; Pascal Panizza

Collaboration


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Laurent Courbin

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Bruno Bêche

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Alexandre Schmit

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Véronique Vié

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Louis Salkin

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Etienne Gaviot

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Malika Belloul

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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