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Dive into the research topics where Simona Moldovan is active.

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Featured researches published by Simona Moldovan.


Nature Communications | 2012

Anomalous high capacitance in a coaxial single nanowire capacitor

Zheng Liu; Yongjie Zhan; Gang Shi; Simona Moldovan; Mohamed Gharbi; Li Song; Lulu Ma; Wei Gao; Jia-Qi Huang; Robert Vajtai; Florian Banhart; Pradeep Sharma; Jun Lou; Pulickel M. Ajayan

Building entire multiple-component devices on single nanowires is a promising strategy for miniaturizing electronic applications. Here we demonstrate a single nanowire capacitor with a coaxial asymmetric Cu-Cu(2)O-C structure, fabricated using a two-step chemical reaction and vapour deposition method. The capacitance measured from a single nanowire device corresponds to ~140 μF cm(-2), exceeding previous reported values for metal-insulator-metal micro-capacitors and is more than one order of magnitude higher than what is predicted by classical electrostatics. Quantum mechanical calculations indicate that this unusually high capacitance may be attributed to a negative quantum capacitance of the dielectric-metal interface, enhanced significantly at the nanoscale.


New Journal of Chemistry | 2013

Reduction of CO2 to methanol by a polyenzymatic system encapsulated in phospholipids–silica nanocapsules

Rémi Cazelles; Jullien Drone; François Fajula; Ovidiu Ersen; Simona Moldovan; Anne Galarneau

By reversing the biological metabolic reaction pathway of three dehydrogenases, a formate dehydrogenase, a formaldehyde dehydrogenase and an alcohol dehydrogenase, it was possible to transform CO2 into methanol by a cascade reaction. The activity of each enzyme was examined separately and then the relative amount of each enzyme for the cascade reaction was optimized. The enzymes consume one molecule of the NADH cofactor each to run which should be regenerated for cost reasons. Three different NAD+ regenerating systems were compared: 2 enzymes (phosphite dehydrogenase (PTDH) and glycerol dehydrogenase) and a natural photosystem extracted from spinach leaves (chloroplasts). PTDH was proven to be more efficient at neutral pH. The new polyenzymatic system (4 enzymes) was then encapsulated in silica nanocapsules (internal diameter 30 nm) nanostructured by phospholipids (NPS). This hybrid nanobioreactor showed an activity 55 times higher than the free enzymes in solution. A methanol production of 42 μmol gNPS−1 corresponding to 4.3 mmol gcommercial enzymatic powder−1 in 3 h at room temperature and 5 bar was obtained.


Nature Communications | 2014

A 3D insight on the catalytic nanostructuration of few-layer graphene

Goergian Melinte; Ileana Florea; Simona Moldovan; Izabela Janowska; Walid Baaziz; Raul Arenal; Andreas Wisnet; Christina Scheu; Sylvie Begin-Colin; Dominique Begin; Cuong Pham-Huu; Ovidiu Ersen

The catalytic cutting of few-layer graphene is nowadays a hot topic in materials research due to its potential applications in the catalysis field and the graphene nanoribbons fabrication. We show here a 3D analysis of the nanostructuration of few-layer graphene by iron-based nanoparticles under hydrogen flow. The nanoparticles located at the edges or attached to the steps on the FLG sheets create trenches and tunnels with orientations, lengths and morphologies defined by the crystallography and the topography of the carbon substrate. The cross-sectional analysis of the 3D volumes highlights the role of the active nanoparticle identity on the trench size and shape, with emphasis on the topographical stability of the basal planes within the resulting trenches and channels, no matter the obstacle encountered. The actual study gives a deep insight on the impact of nanoparticles morphology and support topography on the 3D character of nanostructures built up by catalytic cutting.


Micron | 2014

Effect of strontium ranelate on bone mineral: Analysis of nanoscale compositional changes.

André L. Rossi; Simona Moldovan; William Querido; Alexandre Malta Rossi; Jacques Werckmann; Ovidiu Ersen; Marcos Farina

Strontium ranelate has been used to prevent bone loss and stimulate bone regeneration. Although strontium may integrate into the bone crystal lattice, the chemical and structural modifications of the bone when strontium interacts with the mineral phase are not completely understood. The objective of this study was to evaluate apatite from the mandibles of rats treated with strontium ranelate in the drinking water and compare its characteristics with those from untreated rats and synthetic apatites with and without strontium. Electron energy loss near edge structures from phosphorus, carbon, calcium and strontium were obtained by electron energy loss spectroscopy in a transmission electron microscope. The strontium signal was detected in the biological and synthetic samples containing strontium. The relative quantification of carbon by analyzing the CK edge at an energy loss of ΔE = 284 eV showed an increase in the number of carbonate groups in the bone mineral of treated rats. A synthetic strontium-containing sample used as control did not exhibit a carbon signal. This study showed physicochemical modifications in the bone mineral at the nanoscale caused by the systemic administration of strontium ranelate.


Nature Communications | 2016

Sampling the structure and chemical order in assemblies of ferromagnetic nanoparticles by nuclear magnetic resonance

Yuefeng Liu; Jingjie Luo; Yooleemi Shin; Simona Moldovan; Ovidiu Ersen; Anne Hébraud; Guy Schlatter; Cuong Pham-Huu; C. Meny

Assemblies of nanoparticles are studied in many research fields from physics to medicine. However, as it is often difficult to produce mono-dispersed particles, investigating the key parameters enhancing their efficiency is blurred by wide size distributions. Indeed, near-field methods analyse a part of the sample that might not be representative of the full size distribution and macroscopic methods give average information including all particle sizes. Here, we introduce temperature differential ferromagnetic nuclear resonance spectra that allow sampling the crystallographic structure, the chemical composition and the chemical order of non-interacting ferromagnetic nanoparticles for specific size ranges within their size distribution. The method is applied to cobalt nanoparticles for catalysis and allows extracting the size effect from the crystallographic structure effect on their catalytic activity. It also allows sampling of the chemical composition and chemical order within the size distribution of alloyed nanoparticles and can thus be useful in many research fields.


Nanoscale | 2016

The core contribution of transmission electron microscopy to functional nanomaterials engineering

Sophie Carenco; Simona Moldovan; Lucian Roiban; Ileana Florea; David Portehault; Karine Valle; Philippe Belleville; Cédric Boissière; Laurence Rozes; Nicolas Mézailles; Marc Drillon; Clément Sanchez; Ovidiu Ersen

Research on nanomaterials and nanostructured materials is burgeoning because their numerous and versatile applications contribute to solve societal needs in the domain of medicine, energy, environment and STICs. Optimizing their properties requires in-depth analysis of their structural, morphological and chemical features at the nanoscale. In a transmission electron microscope (TEM), combining tomography with electron energy loss spectroscopy and high-magnification imaging in high-angle annular dark-field mode provides access to all features of the same object. Today, TEM experiments in three dimensions are paramount to solve tough structural problems associated with nanoscale matter. This approach allowed a thorough morphological description of silica fibers. Moreover, quantitative analysis of the mesoporous network of binary metal oxide prepared by template-assisted spray-drying was performed, and the homogeneity of amino functionalized metal-organic frameworks was assessed. Besides, the morphology and internal structure of metal phosphide nanoparticles was deciphered, providing a milestone for understanding phase segregation at the nanoscale. By extrapolating to larger classes of materials, from soft matter to hard metals and/or ceramics, this approach allows probing small volumes and uncovering materials characteristics and properties at two or three dimensions. Altogether, this feature article aims at providing (nano)materials scientists with a representative set of examples that illustrates the capabilities of modern TEM and tomography, which can be transposed to their own research.


Catalysis Science & Technology | 2016

Selective CO2 methanation on Ru/TiO2 catalysts: unravelling the decisive role of the TiO2 support crystal structure

Ara Kim; Clément Sanchez; G. Patriarche; Ovidiu Ersen; Simona Moldovan; A. Wisnet; Capucine Sassoye; Damien P. Debecker

The catalytic hydrogenation of CO2 is a relevant strategy for mitigating CO2 emissions and its applicability relies on our ability to prepare catalysts that are highly active under mild conditions. Understanding and improving these tailored catalysts requires innovative materials synthesis routes and advanced methods of characterization. In this study, mono-dispersed 2 nm RuO2 nanoparticles were prepared as a stable colloidal suspension and deposited onto different titania supports by impregnation. Supported RuO2 nanoparticles are homogeneously dispersed at the surface of the titania supports. Then, upon annealing and reduction, metallic Ru nanoparticles are obtained, which are active in the hydrogenation of CO2 to CH4. However, depending on the crystal structure of the different TiO2 supports (anatase, rutile, and a mixture of both), the catalysts exhibited drastically diverse catalytic performances. An array of characterization tools (N2-physisorption, H2-chemisorption, HR-TEM, STEM-HAADF, 3D tomographic analysis, XRD, and XPS) was used to unravel the origin of this support effect. It appeared that catalytic behaviour was related to profound morphological changes occurring during the annealing step. In particular, advanced electron microscopy techniques allow visualisation of the consequences of RuO2 nanoparticle mobility onto titania. It is shown that RuO2 sinters heavily on anatase TiO2, but spreads and forms epitaxial layers onto rutile TiO2. On anatase, large Ru chunks are finally obtained. On rutile, the formation of a particular “rutile-TiO2/RuO2/rutile-TiO2 sandwich structure” is demonstrated. These phenomena – along with the relative thermal instability of the supports – explain why the catalysts based on the commercial P25 titania support outperform those based on pure crystalline titania. The study opens new perspectives for the design of highly active CO2 methanation catalysts.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2017

In Situ Solid–Gas Reactivity of Nanoscaled Metal Borides from Molten Salt Synthesis

Guillaume Gouget; Damien P. Debecker; Ara Kim; Giorgia Olivieri; Jean-Jacques Gallet; Fabrice Bournel; Cyril Thomas; Ovidiu Ersen; Simona Moldovan; Clément Sanchez; Sophie Carenco; David Portehault

Metal borides have mostly been studied as bulk materials. The nanoscale provides new opportunities to investigate the properties of these materials, e.g., nanoscale hardening and surface reactivity. Metal borides are often considered stable solids because of their covalent character, but little is known on their behavior under a reactive atmosphere, especially reductive gases. We use molten salt synthesis at 750 °C to provide cobalt monoboride (CoB) nanocrystals embedded in an amorphous layer of cobalt(II) and partially oxidized boron as a model platform to study morphological, chemical, and structural evolutions of the boride and the superficial layer exposed to argon, dihydrogen (H2), and a mixture of H2 and carbon dioxide (CO2) through a multiscale in situ approach: environmental transmission electron microscopy, synchrotron-based near-ambient-pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and near-edge X-ray absorption spectroscopy. Although the material is stable under argon, H2 triggers at 400 °C decomposition of CoB, leading to cobalt(0) nanoparticles. We then show that H2 activates CoB for the catalysis of CO2 methanation. A similar decomposition process is also observed on NiB nanocrystals under oxidizing conditions at 300 °C. Our work highlights the instability under reactive atmospheres of nanocrystalline cobalt and nickel borides obtained from molten salt synthesis. Therefore, we question the general stability of metal borides with distinct compositions under such conditions. These results shed light on the actual species in metal boride catalysis and provide the framework for future applications of metal borides in their stability domains.


Nature Communications | 2017

Interfacial charge distributions in carbon-supported palladium catalysts

Radhika G. Rao; Raoul Blume; Thomas Willum Hansen; Erika Fuentes; Kathleen Dreyer; Simona Moldovan; Ovidiu Ersen; David D. Hibbitts; Yves J. Chabal; Robert Schlögl; Jean-Philippe Tessonnier

Controlling the charge transfer between a semiconducting catalyst carrier and the supported transition metal active phase represents an elite strategy for fine turning the electronic structure of the catalytic centers, hence their activity and selectivity. These phenomena have been theoretically and experimentally elucidated for oxide supports but remain poorly understood for carbons due to their complex nanoscale structure. Here, we combine advanced spectroscopy and microscopy on model Pd/C samples to decouple the electronic and surface chemistry effects on catalytic performance. Our investigations reveal trends between the charge distribution at the palladium–carbon interface and the metal’s selectivity for hydrogenation of multifunctional chemicals. These electronic effects are strong enough to affect the performance of large (~5 nm) Pd particles. Our results also demonstrate how simple thermal treatments can be used to tune the interfacial charge distribution, hereby providing a strategy to rationally design carbon-supported catalysts.Control over charge transfer in carbon-supported metal nanoparticles is essential for designing new catalysts. Here, the authors show that thermal treatments effectively tune the interfacial charge distribution in carbon-supported palladium catalysts with consequential changes in hydrogenation performance.


ACS Nano | 2017

Nanophase Segregation of Self-Assembled Monolayers on Gold Nanoparticles

Santosh Kumar Meena; Claire Goldmann; Douga Nassoko; Mahamadou Seydou; Thomas Marchandier; Simona Moldovan; Ovidiu Ersen; François Ribot; Corinne Chanéac; Clément Sanchez; David Portehault; Frederik Tielens; Marialore Sulpizi

Nanophase segregation of a bicomponent thiol self-assembled monolayer is predicted using atomistic molecular dynamics simulations and experimentally confirmed. The simulations suggest the formation of domains rich in acid-terminated chains, on one hand, and of domains rich in amide-functionalized ethylene glycol oligomers, on the other hand. In particular, within the amide-ethylene glycol oligomers region, a key role is played by the formation of interchain hydrogen bonds. The predicted phase segregation is experimentally confirmed by the synthesis of 35 and 15 nm gold nanoparticles functionalized with several binary mixtures of ligands. An extensive study by transmission electron microscopy and electron tomography, using silica selective heterogeneous nucleation on acid-rich domains to provide electron contrast, supports simulations and highlights patchy nanoparticles with a trend toward Janus nano-objects depending on the nature of the ligands and the particle size. These results validate our computational platform as an effective tool to predict nanophase separation in organic mixtures on a surface and drive further exploration of advanced nanoparticle functionalization.

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Ovidiu Ersen

University of Strasbourg

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Cuong Pham-Huu

University of Strasbourg

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Ileana Florea

University of Strasbourg

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