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Dive into the research topics where Andrea Tomadin is active.

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Featured researches published by Andrea Tomadin.


Nature Communications | 2013

Ultrafast collinear scattering and carrier multiplication in graphene

Daniele Brida; Andrea Tomadin; Cristian Manzoni; Yong Jin Kim; A. Lombardo; Silvia Milana; Rahul Nair; K. S. Novoselov; A. C. Ferrari; Giulio Cerullo; Marco Polini

Graphene is emerging as a viable alternative to conventional optoelectronic, plasmonic and nanophotonic materials. The interaction of light with charge carriers creates an out-of-equilibrium distribution, which relaxes on an ultrafast timescale to a hot Fermi-Dirac distribution, that subsequently cools emitting phonons. Although the slower relaxation mechanisms have been extensively investigated, the initial stages still pose a challenge. Experimentally, they defy the resolution of most pump-probe setups, due to the extremely fast sub-100 fs carrier dynamics. Theoretically, massless Dirac fermions represent a novel many-body problem, fundamentally different from Schrödinger fermions. Here we combine pump-probe spectroscopy with a microscopic theory to investigate electron-electron interactions during the early stages of relaxation. We identify the mechanisms controlling the ultrafast dynamics, in particular the role of collinear scattering. This gives rise to Auger processes, including charge multiplication, which is key in photovoltage generation and photodetectors.


Science | 2016

Negative local resistance caused by viscous electron backflow in graphene

Denis A. Bandurin; Iacopo Torre; R. Krishna Kumar; M. Ben Shalom; Andrea Tomadin; A. Principi; Gregory Auton; Ekaterina Khestanova; K. S. Novoselov; I. V. Grigorieva; L. A. Ponomarenko; A. K. Geim; Marco Polini

Electrons that flow like a fluid Electrons inside a conductor are often described as flowing in response to an electric field. This flow rarely resembles anything like the familiar flow of water through a pipe, but three groups describe counterexamples (see the Perspective by Zaanen). Moll et al. found that the viscosity of the electron fluid in thin wires of PdCoO2 had a major effect on the flow, much like what happens in regular fluids. Bandurin et al. found evidence in graphene of electron whirlpools similar to those formed by viscous fluid flowing through a small opening. Finally, Crossno et al. observed a huge increase of thermal transport in graphene, a signature of so-called Dirac fluids. Science, this issue p. 1061, 1055, 1058; see also p. 1026 Proximity transport measurements find evidence of whirlpools of graphene’s viscous electronic fluid. [Also see Perspective by Zaanen] Graphene hosts a unique electron system in which electron-phonon scattering is extremely weak but electron-electron collisions are sufficiently frequent to provide local equilibrium above the temperature of liquid nitrogen. Under these conditions, electrons can behave as a viscous liquid and exhibit hydrodynamic phenomena similar to classical liquids. Here we report strong evidence for this transport regime. We found that doped graphene exhibits an anomalous (negative) voltage drop near current-injection contacts, which is attributed to the formation of submicrometer-size whirlpools in the electron flow. The viscosity of graphene’s electron liquid is found to be ~0.1 square meters per second, an order of magnitude higher than that of honey, in agreement with many-body theory. Our work demonstrates the possibility of studying electron hydrodynamics using high-quality graphene.


Physical Review Letters | 2010

Dynamical phase transitions and instabilities in open atomic many-body systems.

Sebastian Diehl; Andrea Tomadin; Andrea Micheli; Rosario Fazio; P. Zoller

We discuss an open driven-dissipative many-body system, in which the competition of unitary Hamiltonian and dissipative Liouvillian dynamics leads to a nonequilibrium phase transition. It shares features of a quantum phase transition in that it is interaction driven, and of a classical phase transition, in that the ordered phase is continuously connected to a thermal state. We characterize the phase diagram and the critical behavior at the phase transition approached as a function of time. We find a novel fluctuation induced dynamical instability, which occurs at long wavelength as a consequence of a subtle dissipative renormalization effect on the speed of sound.


Physical Review B | 2013

Nonequilibrium dynamics of photoexcited electrons in graphene: Collinear scattering, Auger processes, and the impact of screening

Andrea Tomadin; Daniele Brida; Giulio Cerullo; A. C. Ferrari; Marco Polini

We present a combined analytical and numerical study of the early stages (sub-100-fs) of the nonequilibrium dynamics of photoexcited electrons in graphene. We employ the semiclassical Boltzmann equation with a collision integral that includes contributions from electron-electron (e-e) and electron–optical phonon interactions. Taking advantage of circular symmetry and employing the massless Dirac fermion (MDF) Hamiltonian, we are able to perform an essentially analytical study of the e-e contribution to the collision integral. This allows us to take particular care of subtle collinear scattering processes—processes in which incoming and outgoing momenta of the scattering particles lie on the same line—including carrier multiplication (CM) and Auger recombination (AR). These processes have a vanishing phase space for two-dimensional MDF bare bands. However, we argue that electron-lifetime effects, seen in experiments based on angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy, provide a natural pathway to regularize this pathology, yielding a finite contribution due to CM and AR to the Coulomb collision integral. Finally, we discuss in detail the role of physics beyond the Fermi golden rule by including screening in the matrix element of the Coulomb interaction at the level of the random phase approximation (RPA), focusing in particular on the consequences of various approximations including static RPA screening, which maximizes the impact of CM and AR processes, and dynamical RPA screening, which completely suppresses them.


Physical Review B | 2015

Nonlocal transport and the hydrodynamic shear viscosity in graphene

Iacopo Torre; Andrea Tomadin; A. K. Geim; Marco Polini

Motivated by recent experimental progress in preparing encapsulated graphene sheets with ultrahigh mobilities up to room temperature, we present a theoretical study of dc transport in doped graphene in the hydrodynamic regime. By using the continuity and Navier-Stokes equations, we demonstrate analytically that measurements of nonlocal resistances in multiterminal Hall bar devices can be used to extract the hydrodynamic shear viscosity of the two-dimensional (2D) electron liquid in graphene. We also discuss how to probe the viscosity-dominated hydrodynamic transport regime by scanning probe potentiometry and magnetometry. Our approach enables measurements of the viscosity of any 2D electron liquid in the hydrodynamic transport regime.


Journal of The Optical Society of America B-optical Physics | 2010

Many-body phenomena in QED-cavity arrays [Invited]

Andrea Tomadin; Rosario Fazio

Coupled quantum electrodynamics (QED) cavities have been recently proposed as new systems to simulate a variety of equilibrium and nonequilibrium many-body phenomena. We present a brief review of their main properties together with a survey of the latest developments of the field and some perspectives concerning their experimental realizations and possible new theoretical directions.


Physical Review B | 2010

Electron density distribution and screening in rippled graphene sheets

Marco Gibertini; Andrea Tomadin; Marco Polini; A. Fasolino; M. I. Katsnelson

Single-layer graphene sheets are typically characterized by long-wavelength corrugations (ripples) which can be shown to be at the origin of rather strong potentials with both scalar and vector components. We present an extensive microscopic study, based on a self-consistent Kohn-Sham-Dirac density-functional method, of the carrier-density distribution in the presence of these ripple-induced external fields. We find that spatial density fluctuations are essentially controlled by the scalar component, especially in nearly neutral graphene sheets, and that in-plane atomic displacements are as important as out-of-plane ones. The latter fact is at the origin of a complicated spatial distribution of electron-hole puddles which has no evident correlation with the out-of-plane topographic corrugations. In the range of parameters we have explored, exchange and correlation contributions to the Kohn-Sham potential seem to play a minor role.


Physical Review B | 2012

Electron-hole puddles in the absence of charged impurities

Marco Gibertini; Andrea Tomadin; F. Guinea; M. I. Katsnelson; Marco Polini

It is widely believed that carrier-density inhomogeneities (“electron-hole puddles”) in single-layer graphene on a substrate such as quartz are due to charged impurities located close to the graphene sheet. Here we demonstrate by using a Kohn-Sham-Dirac density-functional scheme that corrugations in a real sample are sufficient to determine electron-hole puddles on length scales that are larger than the spatial resolution of state-of-the-art scanning tunneling microscopy.


Physical Review B | 2013

Theory of the plasma-wave photoresponse of a gated graphene sheet

Andrea Tomadin; Marco Polini

The photoresponse of graphene has recently received considerable attention. The main mechanisms yielding a finite dc response to an oscillating radiation field which have been investigated include responses of photovoltaic, photothermoelectric, and bolometric origin. In this article, we present a fully analytical theory of a photoresponse mechanism which is based on the excitation of plasma waves in a gated graphene sheet. By employing the theory of relativistic hydrodynamics, we demonstrate that plasma-wave photodetection is substantially influenced by the massless Dirac fermion character of carriers in graphene, and that the efficiency of photodetection can be improved with respect to that of ordinary parabolic-band electron fluids in semiconductor heterostructures.


Physical Review B | 2008

Density functional theory of graphene sheets

Marco Polini; Andrea Tomadin; Reza Asgari; A. H. MacDonald

We outline a Kohn-Sham-Dirac density functional theory (DFT) scheme for graphene sheets that treats slowly varying inhomogeneous external potentials and electron-electron interactions on equal footing. The theory is able to account for the unusual property that the exchange-correlation contribution to chemical potential increases with carrier density in graphene. The consequences of this property and advantages and disadvantages of using the DFT approach to describe it are discussed. The approach is illustrated by solving the Kohn-Sham-Dirac equations self-consistently for a model random potential describing charged pointlike impurities located close to the graphene plane. The influence of electron-electron interactions on these nonlinear screening calculations is discussed at length in light of recent experiments reporting evidence for the presence of electron-hole puddles in nearly neutral graphene sheets.

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Sebastian Diehl

Austrian Academy of Sciences

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Iacopo Torre

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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P. Zoller

Austrian Academy of Sciences

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A. K. Geim

University of Manchester

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Rosario Fazio

International Centre for Theoretical Physics

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