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Fractal structures and silica films formed by the Treignac water on inert and biological surfaces.

Agnès SmithFatima Zahra AbirYoussef El HafianeYann LaunayCéline Faugeron-GirardVincent GloaguenThierry DeversAnaïs RaynaudCharlotte MoineJean Sainte-LaudyThibaud LatourJean-Francois HausmanGea Guerriero
Published in: Nanoscale advances (2020)
The Treignac water is a natural mineral water containing mainly orthosilicic acid. On inert substrates, it forms a silica film with fractal structures which cannot be reproduced in laboratory-reconstituted water. These structures form by condensation of orthosilicic acid monomers, following the Witten-Sander model of diffusion-limited aggregation. On biological surfaces, such as tomato leaves, the Treignac water forms a silica film with a different morphology and devoid of fractal structures. The filmogenic properties of this natural mineral water are here discussed in the context of crop protection, as the silica film can provide a barrier and a platform for the immobilization of elicitors of plant defense responses.
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