Antonio Politano
Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia
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Publication
Featured researches published by Antonio Politano.
Advanced Materials | 2015
Leonardo Viti; Jin Hu; D. Coquillat; W. Knap; Alessandro Tredicucci; Antonio Politano; Miriam S. Vitiello
The first room-temperature terahertz (THz)-frequency nanodetector exploiting a 10 nm thick flake of exfoliated crystalline black phosphorus as an active channel of a field-effect transistor, is devised. By engineering and embedding planar THz antennas for efficient light harvesting, the first technological demonstration of a phosphorus-based active THz device is described.
Advanced Materials | 2017
Antonio Politano; Pietro Argurio; Gianluca Di Profio; Vanna Sanna; A. Cupolillo; Sudip Chakraborty; Hassan A. Arafat; Efrem Curcio
Thermoplasmonic effects notably improve the efficiency of vacuum membrane distillation, an economically sustainable tool for high-quality seawater desalination. Poly(vinylidene fluoride) (PVDF) membranes filled with spherical silver nanoparticles are used, whose size is tuned for the aim. With the addition of plasmonic nanoparticles in the membrane, the transmembrane flux increases by 11 times, and, moreover, the temperature at the membrane interface is higher than bulk temperature.
Scientific Reports | 2016
Leonardo Viti; Jin Hu; D. Coquillat; Antonio Politano; W. Knap; Miriam S. Vitiello
The ability to convert light into an electrical signal with high efficiencies and controllable dynamics, is a major need in photonics and optoelectronics. In the Terahertz (THz) frequency range, with its exceptional application possibilities in high data rate wireless communications, security, night-vision, biomedical or video-imaging and gas sensing, detection technologies providing efficiency and sensitivity performances that can be “engineered” from scratch, remain elusive. Here, by exploiting the inherent electrical and thermal in-plane anisotropy of a flexible thin flake of black-phosphorus (BP), we devise plasma-wave, thermoelectric and bolometric nano-detectors with a selective, switchable and controllable operating mechanism. All devices operates at room-temperature and are integrated on-chip with planar nanoantennas, which provide remarkable efficiencies through light-harvesting in the strongly sub-wavelength device channel. The achieved selective detection (∼5–8 V/W responsivity) and sensitivity performances (signal-to-noise ratio of 500), are here exploited to demonstrate the first concrete application of a phosphorus-based active THz device, for pharmaceutical and quality control imaging of macroscopic samples, in real-time and in a realistic setting.
Advanced Materials | 2016
Leonardo Viti; Jin Hu; D. Coquillat; Antonio Politano; C. Consejo; W. Knap; Miriam S. Vitiello
By reassembling thin isolated atomic planes of hexagonal borum nitride (hBN) with a few layer phosphorene black phosphorus (BP), hBN/BP/hBN heterostructures are mechanically stacked to devise high-efficiency THz photodetectors operating in the 0.3-0.65 THz range, from 4 K to 300 K, with a record signal-to-noise ratio of 20 000.
Nano Research | 2015
Antonio Politano; G. Chiarello
By analyzing phonon dispersion, we have evaluated the average Young’s modulus and Poisson’s ratio in graphite and in graphene grown on Ru(0001), Pt(111), Ir(111), Ni(111), and BC3/NbB2(0001). In both flat and corrugated graphene sheets and in graphite, we find a Poisson’s ratio of 0.19 and a Young’s modulus of 342 N/m. The unique exception is graphene/Ni(111), for which we find different values because of the stretching of C-C bonds occurring in the commensurate overstructure (0.36 and 310 N/m for the Poisson’s ratio and Young’s modulus, respectively). Such findings are in excellent agreement with calculations performed for a free-standing graphene membrane. The high crystalline quality of graphene grown on metal substrates leads to macroscopic samples with high tensile strength and bending flexibility for use in technological applications such as electromechanical devices and carbon-fiber reinforcements.
Applied Physics Letters | 2013
Antonio Politano; G. Chiarello
High-resolution electron energy loss spectroscopy has been used to investigate the effects of air exposure on the plasmon modes of a graphene-Ru contact. We found that graphene plasmons are quenched after the exposure of the sample to ambient air humidity. This finding represents a severe hurdle for THz plasmonic graphene-based devices, in which graphene-metal contacts are inevitable components.
Journal of Chemical Physics | 2007
Antonio Politano; R. G. Agostino; E. Colavita; V. Formoso; G. Chiarello
Collective electronic excitations occurring in Na layers grown on Cu(111) and in H2O/Na/Cu(111) have been investigated at room temperature by high resolution electron energy loss spectroscopy. Loss spectra taken for a coverage between 0.55 and 0.70 ML of Na are characterized by a feature at 3.0 eV assigned to a Mie resonance. Further increasing the Na coverage leads to the appearance of the Na surface plasmon at 3.9 eV. Water molecules dissociate on Na layers as shown by the appearance of the OH-Na vibration. Upon water adsorption, relevant effects on both electronic excitations and vibrational modes were observed as a function of Na coverage.
Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter | 2012
Antonio Politano; Antonio Raimondo Marino; G. Chiarello
High-resolution electron energy loss spectroscopy has been used to probe phonon dispersion in quasi-freestanding graphene epitaxially grown on Pt(111). Loss spectra clearly show different dispersing features related to both acoustic and optical phonons. The present results have been compared with graphene systems which strongly interact with the substrate, i.e. the nearly-flat monolayer graphene (MLG)/Ni(111) and the corrugated MLG/Ru(0001). We found that the phonon dispersion of graphene/Pt(111) reproduces well the behavior of pristine graphite. This could be taken as an indication of the negligible interaction between the graphene sheet and the underlying Pt substrate. The softening of out-of-plane modes observed for interacting graphene/metal interfaces does not occur for the nearly-free-standing graphene/Pt(111).
ACS Nano | 2016
Antonio Politano; Mattia Cattelan; D. W. Boukhvalov; Davide Campi; A. Cupolillo; Stefano Agnoli; Nicoleta G. Apostol; Paolo Lacovig; Silvano Lizzit; Daniel Farías; G. Chiarello; Gaetano Granozzi; Rosanna Larciprete
By means of a combination of surface-science spectroscopies and theory, we investigate the mechanisms ruling the catalytic role of epitaxial graphene (Gr) grown on transition-metal substrates for the production of hydrogen from water. Water decomposition at the Gr/metal interface at room temperature provides a hydrogenated Gr sheet, which is buckled and decoupled from the metal substrate. We evaluate the performance of Gr/metal interface as a hydrogen storage medium, with a storage density in the Gr sheet comparable with state-of-the-art materials (1.42 wt %). Moreover, thermal programmed reaction experiments show that molecular hydrogen can be released upon heating the water-exposed Gr/metal interface above 400 K. The Gr hydro/dehydrogenation process might be exploited for an effective and eco-friendly device to produce (and store) hydrogen from water, i.e., starting from an almost unlimited source.
Plasmonics | 2012
Antonio Politano; Antonio Raimondo Marino; V. Formoso; Daniel Farías; R. Miranda; G. Chiarello
High-resolution electron energy-loss spectroscopy has been used to study the π plasmon in monolayer graphene grown on Pt(111). A quadratic dispersion has been observed, in contrast to the linear dispersion reported for monolayer graphene grown on SiC(0001) and in agreement with recent experiments on graphene/Ni(111). Despite the weak interaction of the monolayer graphene with the Pt(111) surface, our results indicate that the screening by the underlying metal substrate strongly influences both the dispersion relation and the damping processes of the plasmon mode of π electrons.