24 results on '"Nowak, Sophie"'
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2. Aquatic Fate and Ecotoxicology Effect of ZnS:Mn Quantum Dots on Chlorella vulgaris in Fresh Water.
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Deng B, Maaloul R, Nowak S, Sivry Y, Yéprémian C, Ammar S, Mammeri F, and Brayner R
- Abstract
With the increasing integration of nanomaterials into daily life, the potential ecotoxicological impacts of nanoparticles (NPs) have attracted increased attention from the scientific community. This study assessed the ecotoxicity of ZnS quantum dots (QDs) doped with varying molar concentrations of Mn
2+ on Chlorella vulgaris . The ZnS:Mn QDs were synthesized using the polyol method. The size of the ZnS:Mn QDs ranged from approximately 1.1 nm to 2 nm, while the aggregation size in Seine River water was 341 nm at pH 6 and 8. The presence of ZnS:Mn (10%) NPs exhibited profound toxicity to Chlorella vulgaris , with immediate reductions in viability (survival cells) from 71%, 60% to 51%, 52% in BG11 and Seine River water, respectively, at a concentration of 100 mg L-1 of ZnS:Mn (10%) NPs. Additionally, the ATP content in Chlorella vulgaris significantly decreased in Seine River water (by 20%) after 3 h of exposure to ZnS:Mn (10%) NPs. Concurrently, SOD activity significantly increased in Seine River water, indicating that the ZnS:Mn (10%) NPs induced ROS production and triggered an oxidative stress response in microalgae cells.- Published
- 2024
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3. Dual-Mode Nanoprobes Based on Lanthanide Doped Fluoride Nanoparticles Functionalized by Aryl Diazonium Salts for Fluorescence and SERS Bioimaging.
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Chen H, Nizard P, Decorse P, Nowak S, Ammar-Merah S, Pinson J, Gazeau F, Mangeney C, and Luo Y
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- Fluorides, Salts, Spectrum Analysis, Raman methods, Fluorescent Dyes chemistry, Gold chemistry, Nanoparticles chemistry, Metal Nanoparticles chemistry
- Abstract
The design of dual-mode fluorescence and Raman tags stimulates a growing interest in biomedical imaging and sensing applications as they offer the possibility to synergistically combine the versatility and velocity of fluorescence imaging with the specificity of Raman spectroscopy. Although lanthanide-doped fluoride nanoparticles (NPs) are among the most studied fluorescent nanoprobes, their use for the development of bimodal fluorescent-Raman probes has never been reported yet, to the best of the authors knowledge, probably due to the difficulty to functionalize them with Raman reporter groups. This gap is filled herein by proposing a fast and straightforward approach based on aryl diazonium salt chemistry to functionalize Eu
3+ or Tb3+ doped CaF2 and LaF3 NPs by Raman scatters. The resulting surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS)-encoded lanthanide-doped fluoride NPs retain their fluorescence labeling capacity and display efficient SERS activity for cell bioimaging. The potential of this new generation of bimodal nanoprobes is assessed through cell viability assays and intracellular fluorescence and Raman imaging, opening up unprecedented opportunities for biomedical applications., (© 2023 The Authors. Small published by Wiley-VCH GmbH.)- Published
- 2024
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4. Mechanism of formation of Co-Ru nanoalloys: the key role of Ru in the reduction pathway of Co.
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Azeredo B, Ben Ghzaiel T, Huang N, Nowak S, Peron J, Giraud M, Balachandran J, Taché O, Barthe L, Piquemal JY, Briois V, and Sicard L
- Abstract
The chemical synthesis of alloy nanoparticles requires adequate conditions to enable co-reduction instead of separate reduction of the two metal cations. The mechanism of formation of bimetallic cobalt-ruthenium nanoalloys by reducing metal salts in an alcohol medium was explored to draw general rules to extrapolate to other systems. The relative kinetics of the reduction of both metal cations were studied by UV-visible and in situ Quick-X-ray absorption spectroscopies as well as H
2 evolution. The addition of Co(II) ions does not influence the reduction kinetics of Ru(III) but adding Ru(III) to a Co(II) solution promotes the reduction of cobalt cations. Indeed, while CoO is formed when reaching the boiling temperature of the solvent for the monometallic system, a direct reduction of Co is observed at this temperature without formation of the oxide for the bimetallic one. The co-reduction of the metal cations results in the formation of bimetallic nanoplatelets, the size of which can be tuned by changing the Ru content.- Published
- 2023
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5. Does Atmospheric Corrosion Alter the Sound Quality of the Bronze Used for Manufacturing Bells?
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Bentahar M, Petitmangin A, Blanc C, Chabas A, Montresor S, Niclaeys C, Elbartali A, Najjar D, Duccini R, Jean M, Nowak S, Pires-Brazuna R, and Dubot P
- Abstract
Bells are made of bronze, an alloy of copper and tin. Art objects and musical instruments belong to tangible and intangible heritage. The effect of atmospheric alteration on their sound is not well documented. To address this question, alteration cycles of bronze specimens are performed in a chamber reproducing a realistic polluted coastal atmosphere. The corrosion layers are characterized by X-ray diffraction, electron microscopy and X-ray photoelectron spectrometry. The buried interface of the film (alloy-layer interface) is formed by a thin, adherent and micro-cracked layer, mainly composed of sulfates, copper oxide and chloride, on top of tin corrosion products. Near the atmosphere-film interface, less adherent irregular clusters of soot, calcite, gypsum and halite developed. Through these observations, an alteration scenario is proposed. To correlate the bronze corrosion effect on the bell sound, linear and nonlinear resonance experiments are performed on the corroded bronze specimens, where resonance parameters are monitored as a function of increasing driving force using a shaker. Results show that the corrosion effect on the acoustic properties can be monitored through the evolution of the acoustic nonlinear parameters (damping and resonance). These well-calibrated original experiments confirm the effect of corrosion on the acoustic properties of bronze.
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- 2023
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6. Influence of climatic factors on cyanobacteria and green algae development on building surface.
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Reboah P, Bolou-Bi CB, Nowak S, and Verney-Carron A
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- Climate Change, Esthetics, Meteorology, Cyanobacteria, Chlorophyta
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Buildings and monuments are often colonized by microorganisms that can result in colour change and aesthetical and physico-chemical damages. This bio-colonization is dependent of the material and on the environment. In order to better understand and correlate the microbial development at the surface of buildings with meteorological parameters, concentration of green algae and cyanobacteria have been measured using an in situ instrument on the wall of a private habitation in the Parisian region during two periods: spring and fall-winter. Different locations were also chosen to assess the influence of the position (horizontal or vertical) and of the situation (shaded vs. sunny microclimate). The results show that the microorganism development rapidly responds to rainfall events but the response is more intense in winter as temperature is lower and relative humidity (RH) higher. Cyanobacteria are less sensitive to this seasonal effect as they are more resistant to desiccation than green algae. Based on all the data, different dose-response functions have been established to correlate RH, rain and temperature to the green algae concentration. The influence of the microclimate is considered via specific fitting parameters. This approach has to be extended to new campaign measurements but could be very useful to anticipate the effect of climate change., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (Copyright: © 2023 Reboah et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.)
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- 2023
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7. High-Entropy-Alloy Nanocrystal Based Macro- and Mesoporous Materials.
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De Marco ML, Baaziz W, Sharna S, Devred F, Poleunis C, Chevillot-Biraud A, Nowak S, Haddad R, Odziomek M, Boissière C, Debecker DP, Ersen O, Peron J, and Faustini M
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High-entropy-alloy (HEA) nanoparticles are attractive for several applications in catalysis and energy. Great efforts are currently devoted to establish composition-property relationships to improve catalytic activity or selectivity. Equally importantly, developing practical fabrication methods for shaping HEA-based materials into complex architectures is a key requirement for their utilization in catalysis. However, shaping nano-HEAs into hierarchical structures avoiding demixing or collapse remains a great challenge. Herein, we overcome this issue by introducing a simple soft-chemistry route to fabricate ordered macro- and mesoporous materials based on HEA nanoparticles, with high surface area, thermal stability, and catalytic activity toward CO oxidation. The process is based on spray-drying from an aqueous solution containing five different noble metal precursors and polymer latex beads. Upon annealing, the polymer plays a double role: templating and reducing agent enabling formation of HEA nanoparticle-based porous networks at only 350 °C. The formation mechanism and the stability of the macro- and mesoporous materials were investigated by a set of in situ characterization techniques; notably, in situ transmission electron microscopy unveiled that the porous structure is stable up to 800 °C. Importantly, this process is green, scalable, and versatile and could be potentially extended to other classes of HEA materials.
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- 2022
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8. Objective Neurophysiologic Markers of Cognition After Pediatric Brain Injury.
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Kim N, Watson W, Caliendo E, Nowak S, Schiff ND, Shah SA, and Hill NJ
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Background and Objectives: Following brain injury, clinical assessments of residual and emerging cognitive function are difficult and fraught with errors. In adults, recent American Academy of Neurology (AAN) practice guidelines recommend objective neuroimaging and neurophysiologic measures to support diagnosis. Equivalent measures are lacking in pediatrics-an especially great challenge due to the combined heterogeneity of both brain injury and pediatric development. Therefore, we aim to establish quantitative, clinically practicable measures of cognitive function following pediatric brain injury., Methods: Participants with and without brain injury were aged 8-18 years, clinically classified according to cognitive recovery state: N = 8 in disorders of consciousness (DoC), N = 7 in confusional state, N = 19 cognitively impaired, and N = 13 typically developing uninjured controls. We prospectively measured electroencephalographic markers of sensory processing and attention in an auditory oddball paradigm, and of covert movement attempts in a command-following paradigm., Results: In 3 participants with DoC, EEG markers of active attempted command following revealed cognitive function that clinical assessment had failed to detect. These same 3 individuals could also be distinguished from the rest of their group by 2 event-related potentials that correlate with sensory processing and orienting attention in the oddball paradigm. Considered across the whole participant group, magnitudes of these 2 ERP markers significantly increased as cognitive recovery progressed (ANOVA: each p < 0.001); viewed jointly, the 2 ERP markers cleanly delineated the 4 cognitive states., Discussion: Despite heterogeneity of brain injuries and brain development, our objective EEG markers reflected cognitive recovery independent of motor function. Two of these markers required no active participation. Together, they allowed us to identify 3 individuals who meet the criteria for cognitive-motor dissociation. To diagnose, prognose, and track cognitive recovery accurately, such markers should be used in pediatrics., (Copyright © 2022 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. on behalf of the American Academy of Neurology.)
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- 2022
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9. Cognitive-Motor Dissociation Following Pediatric Brain Injury: What About the Children?
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Kim N, O'Sullivan J, Olafson E, Caliendo E, Nowak S, Voss HU, Lowder R, Watson WD, Ivanidze J, Fins JJ, Schiff ND, Hill NJ, and Shah SA
- Abstract
Background and Objectives: Following severe brain injury, up to 16% of adults showing no clinical signs of cognitive function nonetheless have preserved cognitive capacities detectable via neuroimaging and neurophysiology; this has been designated cognitive-motor dissociation (CMD). Pediatric medicine lacks both practice guidelines for identifying covert cognition and epidemiologic data regarding CMD prevalence., Methods: We applied a diverse battery of neuroimaging and neurophysiologic tests to evaluate 2 adolescents (aged 15 and 18 years) who had shown no clinical evidence of preserved cognitive function following brain injury at age 9 and 13 years, respectively. Clinical evaluations were consistent with minimally conscious state (minus) and vegetative state, respectively., Results: Both participants' EEG, and 1 participant's fMRI, provided evidence that they could understand commands and make consistent voluntary decisions to follow them. Both participants' EEG demonstrated larger-than-expected responses to auditory stimuli and intact semantic processing of words in context., Discussion: These converging lines of evidence lead us to conclude that both participants had preserved cognitive function dissociated from their motor output. Throughout the 5+ years since injury, communication attempts and therapy had remained uninformed by such objective evidence of their cognitive abilities. Proper diagnosis of CMD is an ethical imperative. Children with covert cognition reflect a vulnerable and isolated population; the methods outlined here provide a first step in identifying such persons to advance efforts to alleviate their condition., (Copyright © 2022 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. on behalf of the American Academy of Neurology.)
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- 2022
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10. Acute Imaging Findings Predict Recovery of Cognitive and Motor Function after Inpatient Rehabilitation for Pediatric Traumatic Brain Injury: A Pediatric Brain Injury Consortium Study.
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Caliendo ET, Kim N, Edasery D, Askin G, Nowak S, Gerber LM, Baum KT, Blackwell LS, Koterba CH, Hoskinson KR, Kurowski BG, McLaughlin M, Tlustos SJ, Watson WD, Niogi SN, Suskauer SJ, and Shah SA
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- Adolescent, Brain Injuries, Traumatic rehabilitation, Child, Child, Preschool, Cognition Disorders diagnostic imaging, Cognition Disorders etiology, Female, Hospitalization, Humans, Infant, Male, Motor Disorders diagnostic imaging, Motor Disorders etiology, Predictive Value of Tests, Recovery of Function, Retrospective Studies, Young Adult, Brain Injuries, Traumatic diagnostic imaging, Brain Injuries, Traumatic psychology, Cognition Disorders rehabilitation, Motor Disorders rehabilitation, Tomography, X-Ray Computed
- Abstract
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in children; survivors experience long-term cognitive and motor deficits. To date, studies predicting outcome following pediatric TBI have primarily focused on acute behavioral responses and proxy measures of injury severity; unsurprisingly, these measures explain very little of the variance following heterogenous injury. In adults, certain acute imaging biomarkers help predict cognitive and motor recovery following moderate to severe TBI. This multi-center, retrospective study, characterizes the day-of-injury computed tomographic (CT) reports of pediatric, adolescent, and young adult patients (2 months to 21 years old) who received inpatient rehabilitation services for TBI ( n = 247). The study also determines the prognostic utility of CT findings for cognitive and motor outcomes assessed by the Pediatric Functional Independence Measure, converted to age-appropriate developmental functional quotient (DFQ), at discharge from rehabilitation. Subdural hematomas (66%), contusions (63%), and subarachnoid hemorrhages (59%) were the most common lesions; the majority of subjects had less severe Rotterdam CT scores (88%, ≤ 3). After controlling for age, gender, mechanism of injury, length of acute hospital stay, and admission DFQ in multivariate regression analyses, the highest Rotterdam score (β = -25.2, p < 0.01) and complete cisternal effacement (β = -19.4, p < 0.05) were associated with lower motor DFQ, and intraventricular hemorrhage was associated with lower motor (β = -3.7, p < 0.05) and cognitive DFQ (β = -4.9, p < 0.05). These results suggest that direct detection of intracranial injury provides valuable information to aid in prediction of recovery after pediatric TBI, and needs to be accounted for in future studies of prognosis and intervention.
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- 2021
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11. Cognitive Recovery During Inpatient Rehabilitation Following Pediatric Traumatic Brain Injury: A Pediatric Brain Injury Consortium Study.
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Watson WD, Suskauer SJ, Askin G, Nowak S, Baum KT, Gerber LM, Blackwell LS, Koterba CH, Hoskinson KR, Kurowski BG, Mclaughlin MJ, Tlustos SJ, Zimmerman KO, and Shah SA
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- Child, Cognition, Humans, Inpatients, Length of Stay, Prospective Studies, Recovery of Function, Rehabilitation Centers, Retrospective Studies, United States, Young Adult, Brain Injuries, Brain Injuries, Traumatic diagnosis
- Abstract
Objectives: To characterize the demographics, clinical course, and predictors of cognitive recovery among children and young adults receiving inpatient rehabilitation following pediatric traumatic brain injury (TBI)., Design: Retrospective observational, multicenter study., Setting: Eight acute pediatric inpatient rehabilitation facilities in the United States with specialized programs for treating patients with TBI., Participants: Children and young adults (0-21 years) with TBI (n = 234) receiving inpatient rehabilitation., Interventions: Not applicable., Main Outcome Measures: Admission and discharge status assessed by the WeeFIM Cognitive Developmental Functional Quotient (DFQ) and Cognitive and Linguistic Scale (CALS)., Results: Patients admitted to pediatric inpatient rehabilitation are diverse in cognitive functioning. While the majority of patients make improvements, cognitive recovery is constrained for those admitted with the most severe cognitive impairments. Age, time since injury to rehabilitation admission, and admission WeeFIM Cognitive DFQ are significant predictors of cognitive functioning at discharge from inpatient rehabilitation., Conclusions: This work establishes a multicenter Pediatric Brain Injury Consortium and characterized the demographics and clinical course of cognitive recovery during inpatient rehabilitation of pediatric patients with TBI to aid in prospective study design., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2021 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
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12. Introducing cobalt as a potential plasmonic candidate combining optical and magnetic functionalities within the same nanostructure.
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Braik M, Sow I, Nelayah J, Belkhir A, Faustini M, Mercone S, Nowak S, Decorse P, Piquemal JY, and Félidj N
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The control of magnetic properties at the nanoscale is a current topic of intense research. It was shown that combining both magnetic and plasmonic nanoparticles (NPs) led to the improvement of their magneto-optical signal. In this context, common strategies consist of the design of bimetallic NPs. However, the understanding of the physics leading to the coupling between magnetic and plasmonic NPs is lacking, preventing any significant progress for the development of future photonic devices. In this article, we propose to focus our attention on an efficient and commonly used magnetic metal, cobalt, and evaluate its plasmonic properties at the nanoscale through the use of NP regular arrays, as a potential candidate combining both optical and magnetic functionalities within the same metal. We show that such NPs display plasmonic properties within a large spectral range from the UV to the NIR spectral range, with efficient quality factors, when the inter-particle distance is properly selected. These as-fabricated simple materials could find applications in integrated photonic devices for telecommunications.
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- 2021
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13. On the importance of the crystalline surface structure on the catalytic activity and stability of tailored unsupported cobalt nanoparticles for the solvent-free acceptor-less alcohol dehydrogenation.
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Viola A, Peron J, Giraud M, Sicard L, Chevillot-Biraud A, Decorse P, Nowak S, Beaunier P, Lang P, and Piquemal JY
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Unsupported nanoparticles are now recognized as model catalysts to evaluate the intrinsic activity of metal particles, irrespectively of that of the support. Co nanoparticles with different morphologies, rods, diabolos and cubes have been prepared by the polyol process and tested for the acceptorless catalytic dehydrogenation of alcohols under solvent-free conditions. Rods crystallize with the pure hcp structure, diabolos with a mixture of hcp and fcc phases, while the cubes crystallize in a complex mixture of hcp, fcc and ε-Co phases. All the cobalt particles are found to be highly selective towards the oxidation of a model secondary alcohol, octan-2-ol, into the corresponding ketone while no significant activity is found with octan-1-ol. Our results show the strong influence of particle shape on the activity and catalytic stability of the catalysts: Co nanorods display the highest conversion (85%), selectivity (95%) and recyclability compared to Co diabolos and Co cubes. We correlate the nanorods excellent stability with a strong binding of carboxylate ligands on their {1 1 2¯ 0} facets, preserving their crystalline superficial structure, as evidenced by phase modulation infrared reflection absorption spectroscopy., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2020
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14. Correction: Haj-Khlifa, S., et al. Polyol Process Coupled to Cold Plasma as a New and Efficient Nanohydride Processing Method: Nano-Ni 2 H as a Case Study. Nanomaterials 2020, 10 , 136.
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Haj-Khlifa S, Nowak S, Beaunier P, De Rango P, Redolfi M, and Ammar-Merah S
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The authors wish to make the following corrections to this paper [1]: there are two mistakes inthis article [1] [...].
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- 2020
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15. Feasibility of National Institutes of Health Toolbox Cognition Battery in pediatric brain injury rehabilitation settings.
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Watson W, Pedowitz A, Nowak S, Neumayer C, Kaplan E, and Shah S
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- Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, Feasibility Studies, Female, Humans, Male, National Institutes of Health (U.S.), Psychometrics, Reproducibility of Results, United States, Brain Injuries complications, Brain Injuries rehabilitation, Cognition Disorders diagnosis, Cognition Disorders etiology, Neuropsychological Tests statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Objective: Cognitive impairments are a devastating consequence of acquired brain injury (ABI) in children. Current pediatric tools for assessing cognitive impairments are generally time intensive and applicable only to a restricted age span. The National Institutes of Health Toolbox-Cognition Battery (NIHTB-CB) is a standardized, tablet-based cognitive assessment that has been normed across the life span in the general population and validated in adults with brain injuries. However, its clinical utility and validity has not yet been demonstrated in pediatric patients with brain injuries. The current study examines the feasibility of NIHTB-CB administration in both a pediatric inpatient and day treatment rehabilitation setting., Design: The NIHTB-CB was attempted in 40 children with ABI aged 4-18 years within 1 year of injury in pediatric rehabilitation settings., Results: Of the 40 participants tested, 38 (95%) were able to complete the full battery and 28 were able to complete it in 1 session. The average time to complete the NIHTB-CB for our sample was 40.2 min. Barriers to completion included both external (scheduling conflicts) and internal (fatigue, attention, and behavioral) limitations. Cohort results are consistent with expected impairments following ABI., Conclusions: This study demonstrates the feasibility of using the NIHTB-CB in postacute pediatric inpatient rehabilitation and day-treatment clinical settings following ABI. The NIHTB-CB has the potential to provide a quick, standardized assessment of cognitive function during the rehabilitation process. Further longitudinal studies of NIHTB-CB using larger samples will be needed to determine its validity, test-retest capabilities, and clinical utility. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2020
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16. Polyol Process Coupled to Cold Plasma as a New and Efficient Nanohydride Processing Method: Nano-Ni 2 H as a Case Study.
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Haj-Khlifa S, Nowak S, Beaunier P, De Rango P, Redolfi M, and Ammar-Merah S
- Abstract
An alternative route for metal hydrogenation has been investigated: cold plasma hydrogen implantation on polyol-made transition metal nanoparticles. This treatment applied to a challenging system, Ni-H, induces a re-ordering of the metal lattice, and superstructure lines have been observed by both Bragg-Brentano and grazing incidence X-ray diffraction. The resulting intermetallic structure is similar to those obtained by very high-pressure hydrogenation of nickel and prompt us to suggest that plasma-based hydrogen implantation in nanometals is likely to generate unusual metal hydride, opening new opportunities in chemisorption hydrogen storage. Typically, almost isotropic in shape and about 30 nm sized hexagonal-packed Ni
2 H single crystals were produced starting from similarly sized cubic face-centred Ni polycrystals.- Published
- 2020
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17. Quantitative study of the mineralogical composition of mineral dust aerosols by X-ray diffraction.
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Nowak S, Lafon S, Caquineau S, Journet E, and Laurent B
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Mineral dust aerosols, produced by wind erosion in arid regions and semi-arid surfaces, are important components of the atmosphere that affect the Earth radiative budget, atmospheric chemistry and biogeochemical cycles. Dust aerosol particles are composed of a complex mixture of various minerals, mainly clays, calcite, quartz, feldspars and iron oxides. The nature and the relative abundance of the minerals are key parameters to evaluate mineral dust environmental impacts. Strong limitations remain to quantify the mineralogical composition of dust particles, mainly due to the low mass of in-situ collected dust particle samples. In this study, an analytical method and X-Ray Diffraction (XRD) measurements are presented to quantify the mineralogical composition of low mass aerosol particle samples. The method is applied on reference minerals (illite, kaolinite and palygorskite) commonly present in desert dust aerosols, as well as on lab-generated dust aerosols from desert soils. XRD measurements of theses samples in rotation in a glass capillary are combined with the Rietveld refinement method. The results obtained are repeatable and confronted to theoretical values given in the literature for the reference minerals. This method allows us to quantify the mineralogical composition of low mass dust mineral samples with an unprecedented accuracy., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
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18. Autoassemblies of α-Cyclodextrin and Grafted Polysaccharides: Crystal Structure and Specific Properties of the Platelets.
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Carn F, Nowak S, Chaab I, Diaz-Salmeron R, Djabourov M, and Bouchemal K
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- Crystallography, X-Ray, Humans, Microscopy, Electron, Scanning, Solubility, Thermogravimetry, Blood Platelets chemistry, Polysaccharides chemistry, alpha-Cyclodextrins chemistry
- Abstract
Cyclodextrins (CDs) are a family of oligosaccharides with a toroid shape, which exhibit a remarkable ability to include guest molecules in their internal cavity, providing a hydrophobic environment for poorly soluble molecules. Recently, new types of inclusions of α CDs with alkyl grafted polysaccharide chains (pullulan, chitosan, dextran, amylopectin, chondroitin sulfate...) have been prepared which are autoassembled into micro- and nanoplatelets. We report in this paper an extensive investigation of platelets with different compositions, including their reversible hydration (thermogravimetric analysis), crystalline structure (powder X-ray diffraction), dimensions and shapes (scanning electron microscopy-field emission gun), thermal properties, solubility, and melting (micro-differential scanning calorimetry). The crystalline platelets exhibit layered structures intercalating the polysaccharide backbones and CD complexes hosting the grafted alkyl chains. The monoclinic symmetry of columnar-type crystals suggests a head-to-tail arrangement of the CDs. The platelets have a preferentially hexagonal shape with sharp edges, variable sizes, and thicknesses and sometimes show incomplete layers (terraces). The crystal parameters change upon dehydration. Melting temperatures of platelets in aqueous solutions exceed 100 °C. Finally, we discuss the potential relation between the platelet structure and applications for mucoadhesive devices.
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- 2018
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19. Direct and indirect toxic effects of cotton-derived cellulose nanofibres on filamentous green algae.
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Munk M, Brandão HM, Nowak S, Mouton L, Gern JC, Guimaraes AS, Yéprémian C, Couté A, Raposo NR, Marconcini JM, and Brayner R
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- Cellulose chemistry, Chlorophyta metabolism, Ecosystem, Environmental Monitoring methods, Microscopy, Electron, Transmission, Nanofibers chemistry, Particle Size, Reactive Oxygen Species metabolism, Surface Properties, Water Pollutants, Chemical chemistry, Cellulose toxicity, Chlorophyta drug effects, Fresh Water chemistry, Gossypium chemistry, Nanofibers toxicity, Water Pollutants, Chemical toxicity
- Abstract
Recently, cellulose nanofibers (CNFs) have attracted considerable attention as natural, abundant polymers with excellent mechanical properties and biodegradability. CNFs provide a new materials platform for the sustainable production of high-performance nano-enable products for various applications. Given the increasing rates of CNF production, the potential for their release to the environment and the subsequent impact on ecosystem is becoming an increasing concern that needs to be addressed. Here, we used the Klebsormidium flaccidum as a bioindicator organism of terrestrial and freshwater habitats pollution using a battery of biomarkers. Our results show that cotton CNFs inhibit the proliferation of algae and induce morphological changes in them. The two main toxicity mechanisms induced by cotton CNFs are: (i) a direct contact of CNFs with the cell wall and cellular membrane and (ii) an indirect effect through the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS)., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
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20. New insights into the mixing of gold and copper in a nanoparticle from a structural study of Au-Cu nanoalloys synthesized via a wet chemistry method and pulsed laser deposition.
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Prunier H, Nelayah J, Ricolleau C, Wang G, Nowak S, Lamic-Humblot AF, and Alloyeau D
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Gold-copper nanoparticles (Au-Cu NPs) were elaborated by both chemical (polyol reduction method) and physical (laser deposition) routes. The size, composition and crystal structure of these bimetallic nanoalloys were then characterized by aberration corrected transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Using a one-pot polyol method, Au-Cu nanocubes (NCs) with nominal compositions Au3Cu and AuCu3 were synthesized. The size and composition of the NCs were tuned by varying the amount and the ratio of Au(iii) and Cu(ii) ions used as metallic precursors in the reaction. While the particle shape and size were well-controlled, single particle X-ray spectroscopy showed that, irrespective of the targeted compositions, the Cu content in all NCs was about 11-12 at%, i.e. in both samples, the real composition was different from the nominal one. This was ascribed to an incomplete alloying of the two constituent metals of the alloy in the cubes due to different reduction kinetics of the two metallic precursors. To shed light on the alloying of gold and copper at the nanoscale, Au-Cu NPs with targeted compositions Au3Cu and AuCu3 were deposited on amorphous carbon by laser ablation of two monometallic sources, and their structural properties were studied by TEM. These studies show that Au-Cu nanoalloys were synthesized in both samples and that the complete mixing of Au and Cu atoms achieved with this synthesis technique led to the production of Au-Cu NPs with well-controlled compositions. These results constitute a first but major step towards a complete understanding of the details of kinetics and thermodynamics determining the mixing of gold and copper atoms at the nanoscale. Such an understanding is essential for producing Au-Cu bimetallic nanoalloys with well-defined structural properties via wet chemical synthesis.
- Published
- 2015
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21. Effect of nontronite smectite clay on the chemical evolution of several organic molecules under simulated martian surface ultraviolet radiation conditions.
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Poch O, Jaber M, Stalport F, Nowak S, Georgelin T, Lambert JF, Szopa C, and Coll P
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- Extraterrestrial Environment chemistry, Evolution, Chemical, Mars, Organic Chemicals chemistry, Silicates chemistry, Ultraviolet Rays
- Abstract
Most of the phyllosilicates detected at the surface of Mars today are probably remnants of ancient environments that sustained long-term bodies of liquid water at the surface or subsurface and were possibly favorable for the emergence of life. Consequently, phyllosilicates have become the main mineral target in the search for organics on Mars. But are phyllosilicates efficient at preserving organic molecules under current environmental conditions at the surface of Mars? We monitored the qualitative and quantitative evolutions of glycine, urea, and adenine in interaction with the Fe(3+)-smectite clay nontronite, one of the most abundant phyllosilicates present at the surface of Mars, under simulated martian surface ultraviolet light (190-400 nm), mean temperature (218 ± 2 K), and pressure (6 ± 1 mbar) in a laboratory simulation setup. We tested organic-rich samples that were representative of the evaporation of a small, warm pond of liquid water containing a high concentration of organics. For each molecule, we observed how the nontronite influences its quantum efficiency of photodecomposition and the nature of its solid evolution products. The results reveal a pronounced photoprotective effect of nontronite on the evolution of glycine and adenine; their efficiencies of photodecomposition were reduced by a factor of 5 when mixed at a concentration of 2.6 × 10(-2) mol of molecules per gram of nontronite. Moreover, when the amount of nontronite in the sample of glycine was increased by a factor of 2, the gain of photoprotection was multiplied by a factor of 5. This indicates that the photoprotection provided by the nontronite is not a purely mechanical shielding effect but is also due to stabilizing interactions. No new evolution product was firmly identified, but the results obtained with urea suggest a particular reactivity in the presence of nontronite, leading to an increase of its dissociation rate.
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- 2015
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22. Control of the anisotropic shape of cobalt nanorods in the liquid phase: from experiment to theory… and back.
- Author
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Atmane KA, Michel C, Piquemal JY, Sautet P, Beaunier P, Giraud M, Sicard M, Nowak S, Losno R, and Viau G
- Abstract
The polyol process is one of the few methods allowing the preparation of metal nanoparticles in solution. Hexagonal close packed monocrystalline Co nanorods are easily obtained in basic 1,2-butanediol at 448 K after a few minutes using a Co(II) dicarboxylate precursor. By using a combined experimental and theoretical approach, this study aims at a better understanding of the growth of anisotropic cobalt ferromagnetic nanoparticles by the polyol process. The growth of Co nanorods along the c axis of the hexagonal system was clearly evidenced by transmission electron microscopy, while the mean diameter was found to be almost constant at about 15 nm. Powder X-ray diffraction data showed that metallic cobalt was generated at the expense of a non-reduced solid lamellar intermediate phase which can be considered as a carboxylate ligand reservoir. Density functional theory calculations combined with a thermodynamic approach unambiguously showed that the main parameter governing the shape of the objects is the chemical potential of the carboxylate ligand: the crystal habit was deeply modified from rods to platelets when increasing the concentration of the ligand, i.e. its chemical potential. The approach presented in this study could be extended to a large number of particle types and growth conditions, where ligands play a key role in determining the particle shape.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Uncoated and coated ZnO nanoparticle life cycle in synthetic seawater.
- Author
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Gelabert A, Sivry Y, Ferrari R, Akrout A, Cordier L, Nowak S, Menguy N, and Benedetti MF
- Subjects
- Fresh Water chemistry, Hydrogen-Ion Concentration, Kinetics, Membranes, Artificial, Solubility, Ultrafiltration, Metal Nanoparticles chemistry, Seawater chemistry, Water Pollutants, Chemical chemistry, Zinc Oxide chemistry
- Abstract
The increasing production of nanoparticles has raised strong concerns regarding their environmental release. In life cycle scenarios of nanoparticles, marine systems constitute one of the main final compartments, and the fate of nanoparticles in marine environments needs to be assessed. The dissolution kinetics of commercial uncoated and organic-coated ZnO nanoparticles in synthetic seawater were investigated using the Donnan membrane technique and 1000-Da pore size ultrafiltration. Uncoated nanoparticles reach a maximum dissolution within the first hour, approximately 24% of total ZnO at pH 8.2, and 4% at pH 7.7, followed by secondary carbonated phase precipitation (hydrozincite) until the system reaches a steady state after 30 d of interaction. Assuming a pseudo first-order kinetics for hydrozincite precipitation allowed calculation of kinetics constant values k'(p) of -208 × 10(-4 ) mol L(-1) h(-1 ) ± 15 × 10(-4) mol L(-1) h(-1) (standard deviation) at pH 7.7, and -57 × 10(-4 ) mol L(-1) h(-1 ) ± 11 × 10(-4) mol L(-1) h(-1) at pH 8.2. The presence of an organic coating drastically modifies the life cycle of nanoparticles, with a maximum dissolution reached after 7 d of interaction, followed by a stationary phase lasting from 1 wk to 3 wk, and a subsequent Zn carbonate precipitation until a steady state is reached after 1.5 mo. Monitoring changes in the physicochemical parameters of nanoparticles after exposure to synthetic seawater constitutes an important step in predicting their fate in environmental systems, with major implications for ecotoxicological studies in which metallic speciation is required for toxicity evaluation., (© 2013 SETAC.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Boron-capped tris(glyoximato) cobalt clathrochelate as a precursor for the electrodeposition of nanoparticles catalyzing H2 evolution in water.
- Author
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Anxolabéhère-Mallart E, Costentin C, Fournier M, Nowak S, Robert M, and Savéant JM
- Abstract
Electrochemical investigation of a boron-capped tris(glyoximato)cobalt clathrochelate complex in the presence of acid reveals that the catalytic activity toward hydrogen evolution results from an electrodeposition of cobalt-containing nanoparticles on the electrode surface at a modest cathodic potential. The deposited particles act as remarkably active catalysts for H(2) production in water at pH 7., (© 2012 American Chemical Society)
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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