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Dive into the research topics where A. Goldoni is active.

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Featured researches published by A. Goldoni.


Nature Chemistry | 2010

Efficient water oxidation at carbon nanotube–polyoxometalate electrocatalytic interfaces

Francesca M. Toma; Andrea Sartorel; Matteo Iurlo; Mauro Carraro; Pietro Parisse; Chiara Maccato; Stefania Rapino; Benito Rodriguez Gonzalez; Heinz Amenitsch; Tatiana Da Ros; Loredana Casalis; A. Goldoni; Massimo Marcaccio; Gianfranco Scorrano; G. Scoles; Francesco Paolucci; Maurizio Prato; Marcella Bonchio

Water is the renewable, bulk chemical that nature uses to enable carbohydrate production from carbon dioxide. The dream goal of energy research is to transpose this incredibly efficient process and make an artificial device whereby the catalytic splitting of water is finalized to give a continuous production of oxygen and hydrogen. Success in this task would guarantee the generation of hydrogen as a carbon-free fuel to satisfy our energy demands at no environmental cost. Here we show that very efficient and stable nanostructured, oxygen-evolving anodes are obtained by the assembly of an oxygen-evolving polyoxometalate cluster (a totally inorganic ruthenium catalyst) with a conducting bed of multiwalled carbon nanotubes. Our bioinspired electrode addresses the one major challenge of artificial photosynthesis, namely efficient water oxidation, which brings us closer to being able to power the planet with carbon-free fuels.


Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter | 2010

Sensing gases with carbon nanotubes: a review of the actual situation

A. Goldoni; L. Petaccia; Silvano Lizzit; Rosanna Larciprete

Here we review the possible application of carbon nanotubes (CNTs) as chemiresistor and field-effect transistor chemical sensors. The endeavor of this paper is to understand the key facts emerging from the literature that seem to demonstrate the high sensitivity of CNTs to several molecular species, with the effort to catch the results in a correct manner.


Analyst | 2013

Enhancing the sensitivity of chemiresistor gas sensors based on pristine carbon nanotubes to detect low-ppb ammonia concentrations in the environment

Federica Rigoni; Silvia Tognolini; Patrizia Borghetti; Giovanni Drera; S. Pagliara; A. Goldoni; L. Sangaletti

The possibility of using novel architectures based on carbon nanotubes (CNTs) for a realistic monitoring of the air quality in an urban environment requires the capability to monitor concentrations of polluting gases in the low-ppb range. This limit has been so far virtually neglected, as most of the testing of new ammonia gas sensor devices based on CNTs is carried out above the ppm limit. In this paper, we present single-wall carbon nanotube (SWCNT) chemiresistor gas sensors operating at room temperature, displaying an enhanced sensitivity to NH3. Ammonia concentrations in air as low as 20 ppb have been measured, and a detection limit of 3 ppb is demonstrated, which is in the full range of the average NH3 concentration in an urban environment and well below the sensitivities so far reported for pristine, non-functionalized SWCNTs operating at room temperature. In addition to careful preparation of the SWCNT layers, through sonication and dielectrophoresis that improved the quality of the CNT bundle layers, the low-ppb limit is also attained by revealing and properly tracking a fast dynamics channel in the desorption process of the polluting gas molecules.


Physical Review B | 2009

Erratum: Evidence for three-dimensional Fermi-surface topology of the layered electron-doped iron superconductor Ba(Fe1-xCox)2As2

P. Vilmercati; A. V. Fedorov; I. Vobornik; U. Manju; G. Panaccione; A. Goldoni; Athena S. Sefat; Michael A. McGuire; B. C. Sales; R. Jin; David Mandrus; David J. Singh; Norman Mannella

The electronic structure of electron doped iron-arsenide superconductors Ba(Fe1- xCox)2As2 has been measured with Angle Resolved Photoemission Spectroscopy. The data reveal a marked photon energy dependence of points in momentum space where the bands cross the Fermi energy, a distinctive and direct signature of three-dimensionality in the Fermi surface topology. By providing a unique example of high temperature superconductivity hosted in layered compounds with three-dimensional electronic structure, these findings suggest that the iron-arsenides are unique materials, quite different from the cuprates high temperature superconductors.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Water oxidation surface mechanisms replicated by a totally inorganic tetraruthenium–oxo molecular complex

Simone Piccinin; Andrea Sartorel; Giuliana Aquilanti; A. Goldoni; Marcella Bonchio; Stefano Fabris

Solar-to-fuel energy conversion relies on the invention of efficient catalysts enabling water oxidation through low-energy pathways. Our aerobic life is based on this strategy, mastered by the natural Photosystem II enzyme, using a tetranuclear Mn–oxo complex as oxygen evolving center. Within artificial devices, water can be oxidized efficiently on tailored metal-oxide surfaces such as RuO2. The quest for catalyst optimization in vitro is plagued by the elusive description of the active sites on bulk oxides. Although molecular mimics of the natural catalyst have been proposed, they generally suffer from oxidative degradation under multiturnover regime. Here we investigate a nano-sized Ru4–polyoxometalate standing as an efficient artificial catalyst featuring a totally inorganic molecular structure with enhanced stability. Experimental and computational evidence reported herein indicates that this is a unique molecular species mimicking oxygenic RuO2 surfaces. Ru4–polyoxometalate bridges the gap between homogeneous and heterogeneous water oxidation catalysis, leading to a breakthrough system. Density functional theory calculations show that the catalytic efficiency stems from the optimal distribution of the free energy cost to form reaction intermediates, in analogy with metal-oxide catalysts, thus providing a unifying picture for the two realms of water oxidation catalysis. These correlations among the mechanism of reaction, thermodynamic efficiency, and local structure of the active sites provide the key guidelines for the rational design of superior molecular catalysts and composite materials designed with a bottom–up approach and atomic control.


ACS Nano | 2012

Room temperature metalation of 2H-TPP monolayer on iron and nickel surfaces by picking up substrate metal atoms.

A. Goldoni; Carlo A. Pignedoli; Giovanni Di Santo; Carla Castellarin-Cudia; Elena Magnano; Federica Bondino; Alberto Verdini; Daniele Passerone

Here, it is demonstrated, using high-resolution X-ray spectroscopy and density functional theory calculations, that 2H-tetraphenyl porphyrins metalate at room temperature by incorporating a surface metal atom when a (sub)monolayer is deposited on 3d magnetic substrates, such as Fe(110) and Ni(111). The calculations demonstrate that the redox metalation reaction would be exothermic when occurring on a Ni(111) substrate with an energy gain of 0.89 eV upon embedding a Ni adatom in the macrocycle. This is a novel way to form, via chemical modification and supramolecular engineering, 3d-metal-organic networks on magnetic substrates with an intimate bond between the macrocycle molecular metal ion and the substrate atoms. The achievement of a complete metalation by Fe and Ni can be regarded as a test case for successful preparation of spintronic devices by means of molecular-based magnets and inorganic magnetic substrates.


Small | 2011

Multiwalled Carbon-Nanotube-Functionalized Microelectrode Arrays Fabricated by Microcontact Printing: Platform for Studying Chemical and Electrical Neuronal Signaling

Kai Fuchsberger; Alan Le Goff; Luca Gambazzi; Francesca M. Toma; A. Goldoni; Michele Giugliano; Martin Stelzle; Maurizio Prato

A facile method is proposed for the deposition of multiwalled carbon nanotube (MWCNT) layers onto microelectrode arrays by means of a microcontact printing technique, leading to the fabrication of MEAs characterized by well defined electrical and morphological properties. Using polydimethyl siloxane stamps, produced from different mold designs, a flexibility of printing is achieved that provides access to microscale, nanostructured electrodes. The thickness of MWCNT layers can be exactly predetermined by evaluating the concentration of the MWCNT solution employed in the process. The electrode morphology is further characterized using laser scanning and scanning electron microscopy. Next, by means of impedance spectroscopy analysis, the MWCNT-electrode contact resistance and MWCNT film resistance is measured, while electrochemical impedance spectroscopy is used to estimate the obtained electrode-electrolyte interface. Structural and electrochemical properties make these electrodes suitable for electrical stimulation and recording of neurons and electrochemical detection of dopamine. MWCNT-functionalized electrodes show the ability to detect micromolar amounts of dopamine with a sensitivity of 19 nA μm(-1) . In combination with their biosensing properties, preliminary electrophysiological measurements show that MWCNT microelectrodes have recording properties superior to those of commercial TiN microelectrodes when detecting neuronal electrical activity under long-term cell-culture conditions. MWCNT-functionalized microelectrode arrays fabricated by microcontact printing represent a versatile and multipurpose platform for cell-culture monitoring.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2011

Supramolecular Engineering through Temperature-Induced Chemical Modification of 2H-Tetraphenylporphyrin on Ag(111): Flat Phenyl Conformation and Possible Dehydrogenation Reactions

Giovanni Di Santo; Stephan Blankenburg; Carla Castellarin-Cudia; Mattia Fanetti; Patrizia Borghetti; L. Sangaletti; Luca Floreano; Alberto Verdini; Elena Magnano; Federica Bondino; Carlo A. Pignedoli; Manh-Thuong Nguyen; Roberto Gaspari; Daniele Passerone; A. Goldoni

Scratching the surface: Formation of a monolayer of 2H-tetraphenylporphyrins (2H-TPP) on Ag(111), either by sublimation of a multilayer in the range 525-600 K or by annealing (at the same temperature) a monolayer deposited at room temperature, induces a chemical modification of the molecules. Rotation of the phenyl rings into a flat conformation is observed and tentatively explained, by using DFT calculations, as a peculiar reaction due to molecular dehydrogenation.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Mesoscopic donor-acceptor multilayer by ultrahigh-vacuum codeposition of Zn-tetraphenyl-porphyrin and C70.

Paolo Vilmercati; Carla Castellarin-Cudia; Ralph Gebauer; Prasenjit Ghosh; Silvano Lizzit; L. Petaccia; Cinzia Cepek; Rosanna Larciprete; Alberto Verdini; Luca Floreano; A. Morgante; A. Goldoni

The peculiar electrochemical and photophysical properties of porphyrin and fullerene molecules make them promising candidates for the construction of two- and three-dimensional organic-based materials. An important question is how pristine fullerene and porphyrin will organize when deposited on surfaces via in vacuum molecular beam evaporation. Here we show that codeposition of C(70) and Zn-tetraphenyl-porphyrin (ZnTPP) induces the self-assembly of electron-rich flat aromatic molecules at the curved surface of C(70), thus enhancing the chromophore interaction and forming a supramolecular multilayer donor-acceptor structure. While the ground-state electronic spectra almost reflect a simple summation of ZnTPP and C(70) components, the excited-state electrons at the porphyrin macrocycle can rapidly delocalize to the fullerene. The excited charge transfer time scale is faster than 1-2 fs, as shown by resonant photoemission for the core-excited charges.


Applied Physics Letters | 2002

X-ray photoelectron microscopy of the C 1s core level of free-standing single-wall carbon nanotube bundles

A. Goldoni; Rosanna Larciprete; Luca Gregoratti; B. Kaulich; M. Kiskinova; Yuegang Zhang; Hongjie Dai; L. Sangaletti; F. Parmigiani

Core level photoemission spectra from a free-standing bundle of single-wall carbon nanotubes have been measured using a high-flux soft x-ray spectromicroscope. The good signal-to-noise ratio for the C 1s emission provides information on fundamental quantities such as the core-hole lifetime and binding energy, free from uncontrolled interactions between the nanotubes and the substrate or between the nanotubes and contaminants. We show that it is possible to distinguish chemically different nanotubes from the binding energy and line shape of the C 1s core level. This finding opens unique opportunities to probe in situ the response of the nanotube electronic properties and chemical activity to mechanical actions, doping, and functionalization.

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Silvano Lizzit

Elettra Sincrotrone Trieste

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L. Sangaletti

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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L. Petaccia

Elettra Sincrotrone Trieste

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F. Parmigiani

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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S. Pagliara

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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