Rémi Busselez
University of Rennes
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Featured researches published by Rémi Busselez.
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2009
Rémi Busselez; Ronan Lefort; Qing Ji; F. Affouard; Denis Morineau
We present results from molecular dynamics simulations of liquid glycerol confined in a realistic model of a cylindrical silica nanopore. The influence of the hydrophilic surface and the geometrical confinement on the structure, hydrogen-bond lifetime, rotational and translational molecular dynamics are analysed. Layering and dynamical heterogeneities are induced by confinement. These features share some similarities with previous observations in simpler van der Waals glass-forming liquids. In addition, the specificity of glycerol as an associated liquid shows up in confinement by the formation of interfacial hydrogen bonds and some modifications of the in-pore hydrogen-bonding network. Confinement is also seen to influence the relaxation dynamics and the glassy behaviour in the supercooled state. These phenomena revealed by molecular simulation are important inputs for a better understanding of the many recent experimental results on confined glycerol and more generally for the possible manipulation of associated liquids in porous or fluidic devices.
Journal of Chemical Physics | 2009
Qing Ji; Ronan Lefort; Rémi Busselez; Denis Morineau
Gay-Berne liquid crystals confined in two cylindrical nanopores with different pore sizes were studied by molecular dynamics simulation. Their structure and dynamics properties were obtained and compared with those of the bulk. Our data show that confinement changes the bulk isotropic-to-nematic transition to a continuous ordering from a paranematic to a nematic phase. Moreover, confinement strongly hinders the smectic translational order. The molecular dynamics is characterized by the translational diffusion coefficients and the first-rank reorientational correlation times. Very different characteristic times and temperature variations in the dynamics are observed in confinement. Spatially resolved quantities illustrate that confinement induces predominant structural and dynamical heterogeneities.
Journal of Chemical Physics | 2012
Rémi Busselez; A. Arbe; Silvina Cerveny; Sara Capponi; J. Colmenero; B. Frick
(2)H-nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and neutron scattering (NS) on isotopically labelled samples have been combined to investigate the structure and dynamics of polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) aqueous solutions (4 water molecules/monomeric unit). Neutron diffraction evidences the nanosegregation of polymer main-chains and water molecules leading to the presence of water clusters. NMR reveals the same characteristic times and spectral shape as those of the slower process observed by broadband dielectric spectroscopy in this system [S. Cerveny et al., J. Chem. Phys. 128, 044901 (2008)]. The temperature dependence of such relaxation time crosses over from a cooperative-like behavior at high temperatures to an Arrhenius behavior at lower temperatures. Below the crossover, NMR features the spectral shape as due to a symmetric distribution of relaxation times and the underlying motions as isotropic. NS results on the structural relaxation of both components-isolated via H/D labeling-show (i) anomalously stretched and non-Gaussian functional forms of the intermediate scattering functions and (ii) a strong dynamic asymmetry between the components that increases with decreasing temperature. Strong heterogeneities associated to the nanosegregated structure and the dynamic asymmetry are invoked to explain the observed anomalies. On the other hand, at short times the atomic displacements are strongly coupled for PVP and water, presumably due to H-bond formation and densification of the sample upon hydration.
Journal of Chemical Physics | 2009
Rémi Busselez; Ronan Lefort; Mohammed Guendouz; B. Frick; Odile Merdrignac-Conanec; Denis Morineau
Glycerol and trehalose-glycerol binary solutions are glass-forming liquids with remarkable bioprotectant properties. Incoherent quasielastic neutron scattering is used to reveal the different effects of nanoconfinement and addition of trehalose on the molecular dynamics in the normal liquid and supercooled liquid phases, on a nanosecond time scale. Confinement has been realized in straight channels of diameter D=8 nm formed by porous silicon. It leads to a faster and more inhomogeneous relaxation dynamics deep in the liquid phase. This confinement effect remains at lower temperature where it affects the glassy dynamics. The glass transitions of the confined systems are shifted to low temperature with respect to the bulk ones. Adding trehalose tends to slow down the overall glassy dynamics and increases the nonexponential character of the structural relaxation. Unprecedented results are obtained for the binary bioprotectant solution, which exhibits an extremely non-Debye relaxation dynamics as a result of the combination of the effects of confinement and mixing of two constituents.
Journal of Chemical Physics | 2014
Rémi Busselez; Carole Cerclier; Makha Ndao; Aziz Ghoufi; Ronan Lefort; Denis Morineau
A prototypical Gay Berne discotic liquid crystal was studied by means of molecular dynamics simulations both in the bulk state and under confinement in a nanoporous channel. The phase behavior of the confined system strongly differs from its bulk counterpart: the bulk isotropic-to-columnar transition is replaced by a continuous ordering from a paranematic to a columnar phase. Moreover, a new transition is observed at a lower temperature in the confined state, which corresponds to a reorganization of the intercolumnar order. It reflects the competing effects of pore surface interaction and genuine hexagonal packing of the columns. The translational molecular dynamics in the different phases has been thoroughly studied and discussed in terms of collective relaxation modes, non-Gaussian behavior, and hopping processes.
Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter | 2011
Rémi Busselez; Ronan Lefort; Aziz Ghoufi; Brigitte Beuneu; Bernhard Frick; F. Affouard; Denis Morineau
We have combined incoherent quasielastic neutron scattering experiments and atomistic molecular simulations to investigate the microscopic dynamics of glycerol moving away from the hydrodynamic limit. We relate changes in the momentum transfer (Q) dependence of the relaxation time to distinct changes of the single-particle dynamics. Going from small to large values of Q, a first crossover at about 0.5 Å(-1) is related to the coupling of the translational diffusion dynamics to the non-Debye structural relaxation, while the second crossover at a Q-value near the main diffraction peak is associated with the Gaussian to non-Gaussian crossover of the short-time molecular dynamics, related to the decaging processes. We offer an unprecedented extension of previous studies on polymeric systems towards the case of the typical low-molecular-weight glass-forming system glycerol.
RSC Advances | 2014
Makha Ndao; Ronan Lefort; Carole V. Cerclier; Rémi Busselez; Denis Morineau; B. Frick; Jacques Ollivier; A. V. Kityk; Patrick Huber
Semiconducting nanowires made of discotic columnar liquid crystals can be obtained by impregnation into solid nanoporous templates, and provide new opportunities to tailor devices for organic electronics with promising charge carriers transport properties. These properties are tightly related to the self-assembly and molecular dynamics of the discotic columns inside the nanowires. We recently studied and rationalized the formation of different nanostructures in the columnar phase of pyrene derivative discotics nanoconfined in anodic alumina and porous silicon templates ([Cerclier et al., J. Phys. Chem. C, 2012, 116, 18990–18998, Kityk et al., Soft Matter, 2014, 10, 4522–4534]). We now present the molecular dynamics of nano-confined pyrene derivative mesogenic phases as studied by incoherent quasielastic neutron scattering over a broad range of correlation times. The combination of backscattering and time-of-flight techniques has allowed to describe the nature of the molecular motions at play on the pico to nanosecond time scale. The dynamics of the columnar phase is dominated by fluctuations of the lateral chains, while the onset of larger amplitude motions like whole-body reorientations and slow center-of-mass translational diffusion occurs at high temperature in the isotropic phase. Interestingly, nano-confinement does not qualitatively alter the nature of the molecular dynamics, but essentially blocks the long range translational motions and induces broader distributions of correlation times of the fastest local relaxations.
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2017
Ievgeniia Chaban; H. D. Shin; Christoph Klieber; Rémi Busselez; Vitalyi Gusev; Keith A. Nelson; Thomas Pezeril
We present an optical technique based on ultrafast photoacoustics to determine the local temperature distribution profile in liquid samples in contact with a laser heated optical transducer. This ultrafast pump-probe experiment uses time-domain Brillouin scattering (TDBS) to locally determine the light scattering frequency shift. As the temperature influences the Brillouin scattering frequency, the TDBS signal probes the local laser-induced temperature distribution in the liquid. We demonstrate the relevance and the sensitivity of this technique for the measurement of the absolute laser-induced temperature gradient of a glass forming liquid prototype, glycerol, at different laser pump powers-i.e., different steady state background temperatures. Complementarily, our experiments illustrate how this TDBS technique can be applied to measure thermal diffusion in complex multilayer systems in contact with a surrounding liquid.
International Journal of Nanotechnology | 2008
Rémi Busselez; C. Ecolivet; Régis Guégan; Ronan Lefort; Denis Morineau; Bertrand Toudic; Mohammed Guendouz; F. Affouard
The remaining dynamical degrees of freedom of molecular fluids confined into capillaries of nano to sub-nanometre diameter are of fundamental relevance for future developments in the field of nanofluidics. These properties cannot be simply deduced from the bulk one since the derivation of macroscopic hydrodynamics most usually breaks down in nanoporous channels and additional effects have to be considered. In the present contribution, we review some general phenomena, which are expected to occur when manipulating fluids under confinement and ultraconfinement conditions.
arXiv: Soft Condensed Matter | 2008
Rémi Busselez; Ronan Lefort; Qing Ji; Régis Guégan; Gilbert Chahine; Mohammed Guendouz; Jean-Marc Zanotti; B. Frick; Denis Morineau
Glycerol and trehalose-glycerol binary solutions are glass-forming liquids with remarkable bioprotectant properties. In this paper, we address the effects of confining of these solutions in straight channels of diameter D=8 nm formed by porous silicon. Neutron diffraction and incoherent quasielastic neutron scattering are used to reveal the different effects of nanoconfinement and addition of trehalose on the intermolecular structure and molecular dynamics of the liquid and glassy phases, on a nanosecond timescale.