Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Clivia M. Sotomayor Torres is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Clivia M. Sotomayor Torres.


Angewandte Chemie | 2008

Light‐Emitting Diodes with Semiconductor Nanocrystals

Andrey L. Rogach; Nikolai Gaponik; John M. Lupton; Cristina Bertoni; Diego E. Gallardo; Steve Dunn; Nello Li Pira; Marzia Paderi; Piermario Repetto; Sergei G. Romanov; Colm O'Dwyer; Clivia M. Sotomayor Torres; Alexander Eychmüller

Colloidal semiconductor nanocrystals are promising luminophores for creating a new generation of electroluminescence devices. Research on semiconductor nanocrystal based light-emitting diodes (LEDs) has made remarkable advances in just one decade: the external quantum efficiency has improved by over two orders of magnitude and highly saturated color emission is now the norm. Although the device efficiencies are still more than an order of magnitude lower than those of the purely organic LEDs there are potential advantages associated with nanocrystal-based devices, such as a spectrally pure emission color, which will certainly merit future research. Further developments of nanocrystal-based LEDs will be improving material stability, understanding and controlling chemical and physical phenomena at the interfaces, and optimizing charge injection and charge transport.


Optics Express | 2003

Self-guiding in two-dimensional photonic crystals

Dmitry N. Chigrin; Stefan Enoch; Clivia M. Sotomayor Torres; Gérard Tayeb

Dielectric periodic media can possess a complex photonic band structure with allowed bands displaying strong dispersion and anisotropy. We show that for some frequencies the form of iso-frequency contours mimics the form of the first Brillouin zone of the crystal. A wide angular range of flat dispersion exists for such frequencies. The regions of iso-frequency contours with near-zero curvature cancel out diffraction of the light beam, leading to a self-guided beam.


ACS Nano | 2010

Damaging Graphene with ozone treatment : a chemically tunable metal-insulator transition

Joël Moser; Pablo Ordejón; Haihua Tao; Aurélien Lherbier; Adrian Bachtold; Francesc Alsina; Clivia M. Sotomayor Torres; Jean-Christophe Charlier; Stephan Roche

We present a multiscale ab initio study of electronic and transport properties of two-dimensional graphene after epoxide functionalization via ozone treatment. The orbital rehybridization induced by the epoxide groups triggers a strong intervalley scattering and changes dramatically the conduction properties of graphene. By varying the coverage density of epoxide defects from 0.1 to 4%, charge conduction can be tuned from a diffusive to a strongly localized regime, with localization lengths down to a few nanometers long. Experimental results supporting the interpretation as a metal-insulator transition are also provided.


Small | 2010

Tuning the Intensity of Metal‐Enhanced Fluorescence by Engineering Silver Nanoparticle Arrays

Bingjie Yang; Nan Lu; Dianpeng Qi; Renping Ma; Qiong Wu; Juanyuan Hao; Xiaoming Liu; Ying Mu; Vincent Reboud; Nikolaos Kehagias; Clivia M. Sotomayor Torres; Freddy Yin Chiang Boey; Xiaodong Chen; Lifeng Chi

It is demonstrated that silver nanoparticle (SNP) arrays fabricated by combining nanoimprint lithography and electrochemical deposition methods can be used as substrates for metal-enhanced fluorescence, which is widely used in optics, sensitive detection, and bioimaging. The method presented here is simple and efficient at controlling the nanoparticle density and interparticle distance within one array. Furthermore, it is found that the fluorescence intensity can be tuned by engineering the feature size of the SNP arrays. This is due to the different coupling efficiency between the emission of the fluorophores and surface plasmon resonance band of the metallic nanostructures.


Nano Letters | 2012

Phonons in slow motion: dispersion relations in ultrathin Si membranes.

J. Cuffe; E. Chavez; A. Shchepetov; Pierre-Olivier Chapuis; E. H. El Boudouti; Francesc Alzina; Timothy Kehoe; J. Gomis-Bresco; D. Dudek; Yan Pennec; B. Djafari-Rouhani; Mika Prunnila; J. Ahopelto; Clivia M. Sotomayor Torres

We report the changes in dispersion relations of hypersonic acoustic phonons in free-standing silicon membranes as thin as ∼8 nm. We observe a reduction of the phase and group velocities of the fundamental flexural mode by more than 1 order of magnitude compared to bulk values. The modification of the dispersion relation in nanostructures has important consequences for noise control in nano- and microelectromechanical systems (MEMS/NEMS) as well as opto-mechanical devices.


Solid-state Electronics | 1999

Polymer issues in nanoimprinting technique

Frank Gottschalch; T. Hoffmann; Clivia M. Sotomayor Torres; H. Schulz; Hella-Christin Scheer

We have studied the suitability of poly(methylmethacrylate) (PMMA) of different molecular weight for large area pattern transfer by embossing structures above the glass transition temperature (Tg) of the specific polymer. The molecular weight covers a range of one order of magnitude (Mw∼5.0×104–8.1×105). This range was chosen in order to obtain information regarding the flow properties that we expect to depend strongly on the molecular weight at a specific temperature. Large area pattern transfer were tested by applying a stamp with both densely packed and isolated features. The feature size ranged from 100 μm down to 450 nm. At a processing temperature of 90°C above Tg we found clear indications that flow is sufficient to transfer large, isolated features even into the polymer with the highest Mw. Problems of incomplete material transport can be related to local inhomogeneities of the imprint due to a lack of parallelism between the stamp and the sample. At 50°C above Tg incomplete flow effects were observed over the whole area and for all molecular weights. This was observed only with large, isolated structures whereas small, periodic features showed a well defined transfer.


Optics Express | 2004

Nanopillars photonic crystal waveguides

Dmitry N. Chigrin; Andrei V. Lavrinenko; Clivia M. Sotomayor Torres

We present a novel type of a waveguide, which consists of several rows of periodically placed dielectric cylinders. In such a nanopillars photonic crystal waveguide, light confinement is due to the total internal reflection, while guided modes dispersion is strongly affected by waveguide periodicity. Nanopillars waveguide is multimode, where a number of modes is equal to the number of rows building the waveguide. We present a detailed study of guided modes properties, focusing on possibilities to tune their frequencies and spectral separation. An approach towards the specific mode excitation is proposed and prospects of nanopillars waveguides application as a laser resonator are discussed.


Biosensors and Bioelectronics | 2014

Electrocatalytic tuning of biosensing response through electrostatic or hydrophobic enzyme–graphene oxide interactions

Luis Baptista-Pires; Briza Pérez-López; Carmen C. Mayorga-Martinez; Eden Morales-Narváez; Neus Domingo; María J. Esplandiú; Francesc Alzina; Clivia M. Sotomayor Torres; Arben Merkoçi

The effect of graphene oxidative grades upon the conductivity and hydrophobicity and consequently the influence on an enzymatic biosensing response is presented. The electrochemical responses of reduced graphene oxide (rGO) have been compared with the responses obtained from the oxide form (oGO) and their performances have been accordingly discussed with various evidences obtained by optical techniques. We used tyrosinase enzyme as a proof of concept receptor with interest for phenolic compounds detection through its direct adsorption onto a screen-printed carbon electrode previously modified with oGO or rGO with a carbon-oxygen ratio of 1.07 or 1.53 respectively. Different levels of oGO directly affect the (bio)conjugation properties of the biosensor due to changes at enzyme/graphene oxide interface coming from the various electrostatic or hydrophobic interactions with biomolecules. The developed biosensor was capable of reaching a limit of detection of 0.01 nM catechol. This tuning capability of the biosensor response can be of interest for building several other biosensors, including immunosensors and DNA sensors for various applications.


Nano Letters | 2016

Two-Dimensional Phononic Crystals: Disorder Matters

M. R. Wagner; Bartlomiej Graczykowski; J. S. Reparaz; Alexandros el Sachat; M. Sledzinska; Francesc Alzina; Clivia M. Sotomayor Torres

The design and fabrication of phononic crystals (PnCs) hold the key to control the propagation of heat and sound at the nanoscale. However, there is a lack of experimental studies addressing the impact of order/disorder on the phononic properties of PnCs. Here, we present a comparative investigation of the influence of disorder on the hypersonic and thermal properties of two-dimensional PnCs. PnCs of ordered and disordered lattices are fabricated of circular holes with equal filling fractions in free-standing Si membranes. Ultrafast pump and probe spectroscopy (asynchronous optical sampling) and Raman thermometry based on a novel two-laser approach are used to study the phononic properties in the gigahertz (GHz) and terahertz (THz) regime, respectively. Finite element method simulations of the phonon dispersion relation and three-dimensional displacement fields furthermore enable the unique identification of the different hypersonic vibrations. The increase of surface roughness and the introduction of short-range disorder are shown to modify the phonon dispersion and phonon coherence in the hypersonic (GHz) range without affecting the room-temperature thermal conductivity. On the basis of these findings, we suggest a criteria for predicting phonon coherence as a function of roughness and disorder.


ACS Nano | 2011

Surface-directed dewetting of a block copolymer for fabricating highly uniform nanostructured microdroplets and concentric nanorings.

Richard A. Farrell; Nikolaos Kehagias; Matthew T. Shaw; Vincent Reboud; M. Zelsmann; Justin D. Holmes; Clivia M. Sotomayor Torres; Michael A. Morris

Through a combination of nanoimprint lithography and block copolymer self-assembly, a highly regular dewetting process of a symmetric diblock copolymer occurs whereby the hierarchal formation of microdroplets and concentric nanorings emerges. The process is driven by the unique chemical properties and geometrical layout of the underlying patterned silsesquioxane micrometer-sized templates. Given the presence of nonpreferential substrate-polymer interactions, directed dewetting was utilized to produce uniform arrays of microsized droplets of microphase separated polystyrene-block-poly(methyl methylacrylate) (PS-b-PMMA), following thermal annealing at 180 °C. Microdroplets with diameters greater than 400 nm exhibited a hexagonal close-packed arrangement of nanodots on the surface with polydomain ordering. At the droplet periphery, the polydomain ordering was severely disrupted because of a higher in-plane radius of curvature. By reducing the droplet size, the in-plane radius of curvature of the microdroplet becomes significant and the PMMA cylinders adopt parallel structures in this confined geometry. Continuous scaling of the droplet results in the generation of isolated, freestanding, self-aligned, and self-supported oblique nanorings (long axis ∼250-350 nm), which form as interstitial droplets between the larger microdroplets. Optical and magnetic-based nanostructures may benefit from such hierarchal organization and self-supporting/aligned nanoring templates by combining more than one lithography technique with different resolution capabilities.

Collaboration


Dive into the Clivia M. Sotomayor Torres's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Sergei G. Romanov

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Nikolaos Kehagias

Catalan Institute of Nanotechnology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Colm O'Dwyer

University College Cork

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Worawut Khunsin

Tyndall National Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

J. Ahopelto

VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Michal Osiak

University College Cork

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Francesc Alzina

Spanish National Research Council

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

J. Cuffe

Catalan Institute of Nanotechnology

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge