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Dive into the research topics where Sylvain Deville is active.

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Featured researches published by Sylvain Deville.


Science | 2006

Freezing as a Path to Build Complex Composites

Sylvain Deville; Eduardo Saiz; Ravi K. Nalla; Antoni P. Tomsia

Materials that are strong, ultralightweight, and tough are in demand for a range of applications, requiring architectures and components carefully designed from the micrometer down to the nanometer scale. Nacre, a structure found in many molluscan shells, and bone are frequently used as examples for how nature achieves this through hybrid organic-inorganic composites. Unfortunately, it has proven extremely difficult to transcribe nacre-like clever designs into synthetic materials, partly because their intricate structures need to be replicated at several length scales. We demonstrate how the physics of ice formation can be used to develop sophisticated porous and layered-hybrid materials, including artificial bone, ceramic-metal composites, and porous scaffolds for osseous tissue regeneration with strengths up to four times higher than those of materials currently used for implantation.


Advanced Engineering Materials | 2008

Freeze‐Casting of Porous Ceramics: A Review of Current Achievements and Issues

Sylvain Deville

Freeze-casting of porous ceramics have seen a great deal of efforts during the last few years. The objective of this review is to provide a first understanding of the process as of today. This analysis highlights the current limits of both the understanding and the control of the process. A few perspectives are given, with regards of the current achievements, interests and identified issues. 2 Abstract Freeze-casting, the templating of porous structure by the solidification of a solvent, have seen a great deal of efforts during the last few years. Of particular interest are the unique structure and properties exhibited by porous freeze-casted ceramics, which opened new opportunities in the field of cellular ceramics. The objective of this review is to provide a first understanding of the process as of today, with particular attention being paid on the underlying principles of the structure formation mechanisms and the influence of processing parameters on the structure. This analysis highlights the current limits of both the understanding and the control of the process. A few perspectives are given, with regards of the current achievements, interests and identified issues.


Biomaterials | 2006

Freeze casting of hydroxyapatite scaffolds for bone tissue engineering

Sylvain Deville; Eduardo Saiz; Antoni P. Tomsia

Although extensive efforts have been put into the development of porous scaffolds for bone regeneration, with encouraging results, all porous materials have a common limitation: the inherent lack of strength associated with porosity. Hence, the development of porous hydroxyapatite scaffolds has been hindered to non-load bearing applications. We report here how freeze casting can be applied to synthesize porous scaffolds exhibiting unusually high compressive strength, e.g. up to 145 MPa for 47% porosity and 65 MPa for 56% porosity. The materials are characterized by well-defined pore connectivity along with directional and completely open porosity. Various parameters affecting the porosity and compressive strength have been investigated, including initial slurry concentration, freezing rate, and sintering conditions. The implications and potential application as bone substitute are discussed. These results might open the way for hydroxyapatite-based materials designed for load-bearing applications. The biological response of these materials is yet to be tested.


Acta Materialia | 2007

Ice-templated porous alumina structures

Sylvain Deville; Eduardo Saiz; Antoni P. Tomsia

The formation of regular patterns is a common feature of many solidification processes involving cast materials. We describe here how regular patterns can be obtained in porous alumina by controlling the freezing of ceramic slurries followed by subsequent ice sublimation and sintering, leading to multilayered porous alumina structures with homogeneous and well-defined architecture. We discuss the relationships between the experimental results, the physics of ice, and the interaction between inert particles and the solidification front during directional freezing. The anisotropic interface kinetics of ice leads to numerous specific morphological features in the structure. The structures obtained here could have numerous applications, including ceramic filters and biomaterials, and could be the basis for dense multilayered composites after infiltration with a selected second phase.


Biomaterials | 2004

Critical effect of cubic phase on aging in 3 mol% yttria-stabilized zirconia ceramics for hip replacement prosthesis

Jérôme Chevalier; Sylvain Deville; Etienne Munch; Romain Jullian; Frédéric Lair

The isothermal tetragonal-to-monoclinic transformation of 3Y-TZP ceramics sintered at two different temperatures (1450 degrees C and 1550 degrees C) and duration (2 and 5h) is investigated at 134 degrees C in steam. Particular attention is paid to the presence of a cubic phase and its effect on isothermal aging. Sintering at 1550 degrees C can result in a significant amount of large cubic grains in the specimens, that have a detrimental impact on aging resistance, especially for the first stage of the aging process. Cubic grains appear to be enriched in yttrium, which in turn leads to a depletion of yttrium in the neighboring tetragonal grains. These grains will act as nucleation sites for tetragonal-to-monoclinic transformation. Even for specimens sintered at lower temperature, i.e. 1450 degrees C, the presence of a cubic phase is expected from the phase diagram, leading to a significant effect on aging sensitivity.


Journal of the American Ceramic Society | 2009

Architectural Control of Freeze‐Cast Ceramics Through Additives and Templating

Etienne Munch; Eduardo Saiz; Antoni P. Tomsia; Sylvain Deville

The freezing of concentrated colloidal suspensions is a complex physical process involving a large number of parameters. These parameters provide unique tools to manipulate the architecture of freeze-cast materials at multiple length scales in a single processing step. However, we are still far from developing predictive models to describe the growth of ice crystals in concentrated particle slurries. In order to exert reliable control over the microstructural formation of freeze-cast materials, it is necessary to reach a deeper understanding of the basic relationships between the experimental conditions and the microstructure of the growing solid. In this work, we explore the role of several processing variables (e.g., composition of the suspension, freezing rate, and patterning of the freezing surface) that could affect the formulation strategies for the architectural manipulation of freeze-cast materials. We also demonstrate, using freeze-cast lamellar structures, that reducing the lamellar thickness by less than half increases the compressive strength by more than one order of magnitude.


Nature Materials | 2009

Metastable and unstable cellular solidification of colloidal suspensions

Sylvain Deville; Eric Maire; Guillaume Bernard-Granger; Audrey Lasalle; Agnès Bogner; Catherine Gauthier; Jérôme Leloup; Christian Guizard

Colloidal particles are often seen as big atoms that can be directly observed in real space. They are therefore becoming increasingly important as model systems to study processes of interest in condensed-matter physics such as melting, freezing and glass transitions. The solidification of colloidal suspensions has long been a puzzling phenomenon with many unexplained features. Here, we demonstrate and rationalize the existence of instability and metastability domains in cellular solidification of colloidal suspensions, by direct in situ high-resolution X-ray radiography and tomography observations. We explain such interface instabilities by a partial Brownian diffusion of the particles leading to constitutional supercooling situations. Processing under unstable conditions leads to localized and global kinetic instabilities of the solid/liquid interface, affecting the crystal morphology and particle redistribution behaviour.


Materials | 2010

Freeze-Casting of Porous Biomaterials: Structure, Properties and Opportunities

Sylvain Deville

The freeze-casting of porous materials has received a great deal of attention during the past few years. This simple process, where a material suspension is simply frozen and then sublimated, provides materials with unique porous architectures, where the porosity is almost a direct replica of the frozen solvent crystals. This review focuses on the recent results on the process and the derived porous structures with regards to the biomaterials applications. Of particular interest is the architecture of the materials and the versatility of the process, which can be readily controlled and applied to biomaterials applications. A careful control of the starting formulation and processing conditions is required to control the integrity of the structure and resulting properties. Further in vitro and in vivo investigations are required to validate the potential of this new class of porous materials.


Journal of Biomedical Materials Research Part B | 2005

A critical comparison of methods for the determination of the aging sensitivity in biomedical grade yttria-stabilized zirconia

Sylvain Deville; Laurent Gremillard; Jérôme Chevalier; G. Fantozzi

Since the recent failure events of two particular series of zirconia femoral heads for total hip replacement prosthesis, a large decrease in the use of zirconia ceramics for orthopaedic implants has been observed. In spite of the biomedical success of this material during the last 10 years, this decrease in use was required for safety reasons, until the cause of the failures is known. It has been shown that these failures were related to the low temperature hydrothermal degradation (also known as aging). Thus, it is crucial to better understand the aging behavior, in order to be able to assess its importance and then control it if required. In this study, various techniques relevant to assess the hydrothermal degradation sensitivity of biomedical grade yttria-stabilized zirconia are discussed and compared. The expected outputs of conventional methods, that is, X-ray diffraction and scanning electron microscopy are examined. More recent methods like optical interferometry and atomic force microscopy are presented, with their respective benefits and drawbacks. An up-to-date comparison of these different techniques is provided, and their use for ensuring the long-term reliability of a particular batch of zirconia in terms of aging degradation is demonstrated.


Journal of The European Ceramic Society | 2003

Low-temperature ageing of zirconia-toughened alumina ceramics and its implication in biomedical implants

Sylvain Deville; Jérôme Chevalier; G. Fantozzi; José F. Bartolomé; J. Requena; José S. Moya; Ramón Torrecillas; Luis A. Díaz

Changes in crystalline phases resulting from low-temperature ageing of different yttria doped and non-doped zirconia-toughened alumina composites and nanocomposites were investigated under controlled humidity and temperature conditions in autoclave. A classical powder mixing processing route and a new modified colloidal processing route were used to process the composites. Different compositions ranging from 2.5 wt.% zirconia in a matrix of alumina to pure zirconia (3Y-TZP) were studied. It was observed that Al2O3+yttria stabilised ZrO2 composites exhibited significant ageing. However, ageing was much slower than traditionally observed for Y-TZP ceramics, due to the presence of the alumina matrix. Ageing was clearly limited for zirconia content beyond 25 wt.%. On the other side of the spectrum, Al2O3+2.5 wt.% ZrO2 initially presented a monoclinic fraction but did not show any ageing degradation. These composites seem to represent the best choice between slow crack growth and ageing resistance.

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Antoni P. Tomsia

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Eduardo Saiz

Imperial College London

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Jérôme Chevalier

Institut national des sciences Appliquées de Lyon

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G. Fantozzi

Institut national des sciences Appliquées de Lyon

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Adam J. Stevenson

Pennsylvania State University

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José F. Bartolomé

Spanish National Research Council

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