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Dive into the research topics where Daniele Brida is active.

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Featured researches published by Daniele Brida.


Nature | 2010

Conical intersection dynamics of the primary photoisomerization event in vision

Dario Polli; Piero Altoè; Oliver Weingart; Katelyn M. Spillane; Cristian Manzoni; Daniele Brida; Gaia Tomasello; Giorgio Orlandi; Philipp Kukura; Richard A. Mathies; Marco Garavelli; Giulio Cerullo

Ever since the conversion of the 11-cis retinal chromophore to its all-trans form in rhodopsin was identified as the primary photochemical event in vision, experimentalists and theoreticians have tried to unravel the molecular details of this process. The high quantum yield of 0.65 (ref. 2), the production of the primary ground-state rhodopsin photoproduct within a mere 200 fs (refs 3–7), and the storage of considerable energy in the first stable bathorhodopsin intermediate all suggest an unusually fast and efficient photoactivated one-way reaction. Rhodopsins unique reactivity is generally attributed to a conical intersection between the potential energy surfaces of the ground and excited electronic states enabling the efficient and ultrafast conversion of photon energy into chemical energy. But obtaining direct experimental evidence for the involvement of a conical intersection is challenging: the energy gap between the electronic states of the reacting molecule changes significantly over an ultrashort timescale, which calls for observational methods that combine high temporal resolution with a broad spectral observation window. Here we show that ultrafast optical spectroscopy with sub-20-fs time resolution and spectral coverage from the visible to the near-infrared allows us to follow the dynamics leading to the conical intersection in rhodopsin isomerization. We track coherent wave-packet motion from the photoexcited Franck–Condon region to the photoproduct by monitoring the loss of reactant emission and the subsequent appearance of photoproduct absorption, and find excellent agreement between the experimental observations and molecular dynamics calculations that involve a true electronic state crossing. Taken together, these findings constitute the most compelling evidence to date for the existence and importance of conical intersections in visual photochemistry.


Nature Materials | 2013

Hot exciton dissociation in polymer solar cells

Giulia Grancini; Margherita Maiuri; Daniele Fazzi; Annamaria Petrozza; H.-J. Egelhaaf; Daniele Brida; Giulio Cerullo; Guglielmo Lanzani

The standard picture of photovoltaic conversion in all-organic bulk heterojunction solar cells predicts that the initial excitation dissociates at the donor/acceptor interface after thermalization. Accordingly, on above-gap excitation, the excess photon energy is quickly lost by internal dissipation. Here we directly target the interfacial physics of an efficient low-bandgap polymer/PC(60)BM system. Exciton splitting occurs within the first 50 fs, creating both interfacial charge transfer states (CTSs) and polaron species. On high-energy excitation, higher-lying singlet states convert into hot interfacial CTSs that effectively contribute to free-polaron generation. We rationalize these findings in terms of a higher degree of delocalization of the hot CTSs with respect to the relaxed ones, which enhances the probability of charge dissociation in the first 200 fs. Thus, the hot CTS dissociation produces an overall increase in the charge generation yield.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Ultrafast Dynamics of Exciton Fission in Polycrystalline Pentacene

Mark W. Wilson; Akshay Rao; Jenny Clark; R. Sai Santosh Kumar; Daniele Brida; Giulio Cerullo; Richard H. Friend

We use ultrafast transient absorption spectroscopy with sub-20 fs time resolution and broad spectral coverage to directly probe the process of exciton fission in polycrystalline thin films of pentacene. We observe that the overwhelming majority of initially photogenerated singlet excitons evolve into triplet excitons on an ∼80 fs time scale independent of the excitation wavelength. This implies that exciton fission occurs at a rate comparable to phonon-mediated exciton localization processes and may proceed directly from the initial, delocalized, state. The singlet population is identified due to the brief presence of stimulated emission, which is emitted at wavelengths which vary with the photon energy of the excitation pulse, a violation of Kashas Rule that confirms that the lowest-lying singlet state is extremely short-lived. This direct demonstration that triplet generation is both rapid and efficient establishes multiple exciton generation by exciton fission as an attractive route to increased efficiency in organic solar cells.


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 | 2014

Coherent ultrafast charge transfer in an organic photovoltaic blend

Sarah M. Falke; Carlo Andrea Rozzi; Daniele Brida; Margherita Maiuri; Michele Amato; Ephraim Sommer; Antoinietta De Sio; Angel Rubio; Giulio Cerullo; Elisa Molinari; Christoph Lienau

Pull, pull, pulling electrons along Organic photovoltaics operate by transferring charge from a light-absorbing donor material to a nearby acceptor. Falke et al. show that molecular vibrations smooth the way for this charge transfer to proceed. A combination of ultrafast spectroscopy and theoretical simulations revealed an oscillatory signal in a model donor/acceptor blend that implicates carbon-carbon bond stretching in concert with the electronic transition. This vibrational/electronic, or vibronic, process maintains a quantum-mechanical phase relationship that guides the charge more rapidly and directly than an incoherent migration from donor to acceptor. Science, this issue p. 1001 Oscillations in ultrafast spectra implicate assistance from molecular vibrations in the operation of organic photovoltaics. Blends of conjugated polymers and fullerene derivatives are prototype systems for organic photovoltaic devices. The primary charge-generation mechanism involves a light-induced ultrafast electron transfer from the light-absorbing and electron-donating polymer to the fullerene electron acceptor. Here, we elucidate the initial quantum dynamics of this process. Experimentally, we observed coherent vibrational motion of the fullerene moiety after impulsive optical excitation of the polymer donor. Comparison with first-principle theoretical simulations evidences coherent electron transfer between donor and acceptor and oscillations of the transferred charge with a 25-femtosecond period matching that of the observed vibrational modes. Our results show that coherent vibronic coupling between electronic and nuclear degrees of freedom is of key importance in triggering charge delocalization and transfer in a noncovalently bound reference system.


Journal of Optics | 2010

Few-optical-cycle pulses tunable from the visible to the mid-infrared by optical parametric amplifiers

Daniele Brida; Cristian Manzoni; Giovanni Cirmi; Marco Marangoni; Stefano Bonora; Paolo Villoresi; S. De Silvestri; Giulio Cerullo

Ultrafast optical parametric amplifiers (OPAs) can provide, under suitable conditions, ultra-broad gain bandwidths and can thus be used as effective tools for the generation of widely tunable few-optical-cycle light pulses. In this paper we review recent work on the development of ultra-broadband OPAs and experimentally demonstrate pulses with durations approaching the single-cycle limit and almost continuous tunability from the visible to the mid-IR.


Optics Letters | 2010

Single-cycle multiterahertz transients with peak fields above 10 MV/cm

Friederike Junginger; Alexander Sell; Olaf Schubert; Bernhard Mayer; Daniele Brida; Marco Marangoni; Giulio Cerullo; Alfred Leitenstorfer; Rupert Huber

Phase-locked single-cycle transients with frequency components between 1 and 60THz and peak fields of up to 12MV/cm are generated as the idler wave of a parametric amplifier. To achieve broadband conversion in GaSe nonlinear crystals, we match the group velocities of signal and idler components. The influence of group-velocity dispersion is minimized by long-wavelength pumping at 1.18mum. Free-space electro-optic sampling monitors the multiterahertz waveforms with direct field resolution.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Activated Singlet Exciton Fission in a Semiconducting Polymer

Andrew J. Musser; Mohammed Al-Hashimi; Margherita Maiuri; Daniele Brida; Martin Heeney; Giulio Cerullo; Richard H. Friend; Jenny Clark

Singlet exciton fission is a spin-allowed process to generate two triplet excitons from a single absorbed photon. This phenomenon offers great potential in organic photovoltaics, but the mechanism remains poorly understood. Most reports to date have addressed intermolecular fission within small-molecular crystals. However, through appropriate chemical design chromophores capable of intramolecular fission can also be produced. Here we directly observe sub-100 fs activated singlet fission in a semiconducting poly(thienylenevinylene). We demonstrate that fission proceeds directly from the initial 1Bu exciton, contrary to current models that involve the lower-lying 2Ag exciton. In solution, the generated triplet pairs rapidly recombine and decay through the 2Ag state. In films, exciton diffusion breaks this symmetry and we observe long-lived triplets which form charge-transfer states in photovoltaic blends.


Optics Letters | 2012

Phase-locked pulses for two-dimensional spectroscopy by a birefringent delay line

Daniele Brida; Cristian Manzoni; Giulio Cerullo

Two-dimensional electronic spectroscopy (2DES) allows fundamentally new insights into the structure and dynamics of multi-chromophore systems. So far two schemes have been successfully used to implement 2DES in the visible range: the heterodyne detected three-pulse photon echo and the partially collinear pump-probe geometry. The latter employs two phase-locked collinear pump pulses and a non-collinear probe pulse which is dispersed on a spectrometer. Advantages of this configuration are its simplicity, its applicability to standard pump-probe systems and the fact that it automatically measures absorptive spectra.


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.

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Giovanni Cirmi

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Rupert Huber

University of Regensburg

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