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Institution

University of Mons

EducationMons, Belgium
About: University of Mons is a education organization based out in Mons, Belgium. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Large Hadron Collider & Standard Model. The organization has 3073 authors who have published 9465 publications receiving 294776 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Novel monodispersed silica-coated iron oxide nanoparticles are promising materials for medical imaging, cell tracking and other biomedical applications and display excellent magnetic properties.

177 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The underpinning of this work is a grating architecture—a gold-coated highly tilted Bragg grating—that excites a spectral comb of narrowband-cladding modes with effective indices near 1.0 and below that opens research directions for highly sensitive plasmonic sensing in gas.
Abstract: Surface plasmon polaritons (SPP) can be excited on metal-coated optical fibres, enabling the accurate monitoring of refractive index changes. Configurations reported so far mainly operate in liquids but not in air because of a mismatch between permittivities of guided light modes and the surrounding medium. Here we demonstrate a plasmonic optical fibre platform that overcomes this limitation. The underpinning of our work is a grating architecture—a gold-coated highly tilted Bragg grating—that excites a spectral comb of narrowband-cladding modes with effective indices near 1.0 and below. Using conventional spectral interrogation, we measure shifts of the SPP-matched resonances in response to static atmospheric pressure changes. A dynamic experiment conducted using a laser lined-up with an SPP-matched resonance demonstrates the ability to detect an acoustic wave with a resolution of 10−8 refractive index unit (RIU). We believe that this configuration opens research directions for highly sensitive plasmonic sensing in gas. Fibre sensors are key to many minimally-invasive detection techniques but, owing to an index mismatch, they are often limited to aqueous environments. Here, Caucheteur et al. develop a high-resolution fibre gas sensor with a tilted in-fibre grating that allows coupling to higher-order plasmon modes.

177 citations

Posted Content
TL;DR: In this article, the authors study the time evolution of a sessile liquid droplet, which is initially put onto a solid surface in a non-equilibrium configuration and then evolves towards its equilibrium shape.
Abstract: We study the time evolution of a sessile liquid droplet, which is initially put onto a solid surface in a non-equilibrium configuration and then evolves towards its equilibrium shape. We adapt here the standard approach to the dynamics of mechanical dissipative systems, in which the driving force, i.e. the gradient of the system's Lagrangian function, is balanced against the rate of the dissipation function. In our case the driving force is the loss of the droplet's free energy due to the increase of its base radius, while the dissipation occurs due to viscous flows in the core of the droplet and due to frictional processes in the vicinity of the advancing contact line, associated with attachment of fluid particles to solid. Within this approach we derive closed-form equations for the evolution of the droplet's base radius, and specify several regimes at which different dissipation channels dominate. Our analytical predictions compare very well with experimental data.

176 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a model-independent search for a narrow resonance produced in proton-proton collisions at square root(s) = 8 TeV and decaying to a pair of 125 GeV Higgs bosons that in turn each decays into bottom quark-antiquark pairs is performed by the CMS experiment at the LHC.

176 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This study is focused on the direct relationship between the size and magnetization of the particles and their nuclear magnetic resonance relaxation properties, which condition their efficiency.
Abstract: Magnetic particles are very efficient magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) contrast agents. In recent years, chemists have unleashed their imagination to design multi-functional nanoprobes for biomedical applications including MRI contrast enhancement. This study is focused on the direct relationship between the size and magnetization of the particles and their nuclear magnetic resonance relaxation properties, which condition their efficiency. Experimental relaxation results with maghemite particles exhibiting a wide range of sizes and magnetizations are compared to previously published data and to well-established relaxation theories with a good agreement. This allows deriving the experimental master curve of the transverse relaxivity versus particle size and to predict the MRI contrast efficiency of any type of magnetic nanoparticles. This prediction only requires the knowledge of the size of the particles impermeable to water protons and the saturation magnetization of the corresponding volume. To predict the T(2) relaxation efficiency of magnetic single crystals, the crystal size and magnetization - obtained through a single Langevin fit of a magnetization curve - is the only information needed. For contrast agents made of several magnetic cores assembled into various geometries (dilute fractal aggregates, dense spherical clusters, core-shell micelles, hollow vesicles…), one needs to know a third parameter, namely the intra-aggregate volume fraction occupied by the magnetic materials relatively to the whole (hydrodynamic) sphere. Finally a calculation of the maximum achievable relaxation effect - and the size needed to reach this maximum - is performed for different cases: maghemite single crystals and dense clusters, core-shell particles (oxide layer around a metallic core) and zinc-manganese ferrite crystals.

175 citations


Authors

Showing all 3115 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Giacomo Bruno1581687124368
Krzysztof Piotrzkowski141126999607
Maria Elena Pol139141499240
Rupert Leitner136120190597
Christophe Delaere135132096742
Vincent Lemaitre134131099190
Jean-Luc Brédas134102685803
Luiz Mundim133141389792
Ulrich Landgraf13195983320
Markus Elsing131111182757
Evangelos Gazis131114784159
Loic Quertenmont12990576221
Michele Selvaggi129121483525
Roberto Castello12896576820
Olivier Bondu128104976124
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202322
202264
2021656
2020716
2019606
2018601