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Dive into the research topics where Daniele Martella is active.

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Featured researches published by Daniele Martella.


Advanced Materials | 2015

Light‐Fueled Microscopic Walkers

Hao Zeng; Piotr Wasylczyk; Camilla Parmeggiani; Daniele Martella; Matteo Burresi; Diederik S. Wiersma

The first microscopic artificial walker equipped with liquid-crystalline elastomer muscle is reported. The walker is fabricated by direct laser writing, is smaller than any known living terrestrial creatures, and is capable of several autonomous locomotions on different surfaces.


Advanced Materials | 2014

High‐Resolution 3D Direct Laser Writing for Liquid‐Crystalline Elastomer Microstructures

Hao Zeng; Daniele Martella; Piotr Wasylczyk; Giacomo Cerretti; Jean-Christophe Gomez Lavocat; Chih-Hua Ho; Camilla Parmeggiani; Diederik S. Wiersma

The paper describes 3D structures made of liquid-crystalline elastomer (LCE) - rings, woodpiles, etc. - fabricated by two-photon absorption direct laser writing with sub-micrometer resolution while maintaining the desired molecular orientation. These results lay the foundations for creating 3D, micrometer-sized, light-controlled LCE structures.


Applied Physics Letters | 2015

Alignment engineering in liquid crystalline elastomers: Free-form microstructures with multiple functionalities

Hao Zeng; Piotr Wasylczyk; Giacomo Cerretti; Daniele Martella; Camilla Parmeggiani; Diederik S. Wiersma

We report a method to fabricate polymer microstructures with local control over the molecular orientation. Alignment control is achieved on molecular level in a structure of arbitrary form that can be from 1 to 100 μm in size, by fixing the local boundary conditions with micro-grating patterns. The method makes use of two-photon polymerization (Direct Laser Writing) and is demonstrated specifically in liquid-crystalline elastomers. This concept allows for the realization of free-form polymeric structures with multiple functionalities which are not possible to realize with existing techniques and which can be locally controlled by light in the micrometer scale.


Journal of Natural Products | 2009

Total Synthesis of (−)-Uniflorine A⊥

Camilla Parmeggiani; Daniele Martella; Francesca Cardona; Andrea Goti

Total synthesis of (-)-uniflorine A (3) has been accomplished in nine steps and 11% overall yield from carbohydrate-based nitrone 5. The key steps of the synthetic strategy were a high regio- and complete stereoselective 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition of alkene 6 with nitrone 5, a Tamao-Fleming reaction for replacing the silicon substituent with a hydroxy group with retention of configuration, and a Mitsunobu reaction to establish the correct configuration of the target molecule at C-6.


Journal of Materials Chemistry C | 2015

The first thiol–yne click chemistry approach for the preparation of liquid crystalline elastomers

Daniele Martella; Camilla Parmeggiani; Diederik S. Wiersma; Milagros Piñol; Luis Oriol

A thiol–yne click chemistry reaction is presented, for the first time, to prepare liquid crystalline elastomers. The synthetic strategy is based on two liquid crystalline monomers, one bearing an alkyne group and the second bearing two thiol groups, to create a liquid crystalline network with a mixed side-chain/main-chain structure. The resulting material, having this macromolecular structure, is able to undergo bigger contractions than the common LCEs prepared using photopolymerization and having a side-chain structure. This preparation method results in a good strategy also for miniaturization of LCE devices, a hot topic in microrobotics and fluidic-photonics.


RSC Advances | 2017

Light activated non-reciprocal motion in liquid crystalline networks by designed microactuator architecture

Daniele Martella; D. Antonioli; Sara Nocentini; Diederik S. Wiersma; Giancarlo Galli; M. Laus; Camilla Parmeggiani

Light responsive liquid crystalline networks were prepared by photopolymerization of azobenzene-doped mesogen mixtures and applied for production of micro-actuators by a laser writing technique. Adjusting the cross-linker content was found to be an efficient and easy way to control the dynamics of light-induced deformation from the micro- up to the macro-meter length scales. Starting from a complete characterization of the response of millimeter-sized stripes under irradiation with different sources (LED and laser light), micro-structures based on different monomer mixtures were analyzed for micro-actuator preparation. Double stripes, able to perform a light driven asymmetric movement due to the different mixture properties, were created by a double step process through a laser writing system. These results are a simple demonstration of an optically activated non-reciprocal movement in the microscale by a chemical material manipulation. Moreover, we demonstrate a rapid actuator dynamics that allows a movement in the second time scale for macrostructures and a millisecond actuation in the microscale.


Small | 2017

Liquid Crystalline Networks toward Regenerative Medicine and Tissue Repair

Daniele Martella; Paolo Paoli; Josè Manuel Pioner; Leonardo Sacconi; Raffaele Coppini; Lorenzo Santini; Matteo Lulli; Elisabetta Cerbai; Diederik S. Wiersma; Corrado Poggesi; Cecilia Ferrantini; Camilla Parmeggiani

The communication reports the use of liquid crystalline networks (LCNs) for engineering tissue cultures with human cells. Their ability as cell scaffolds for different cell lines is demonstrated. Preliminary assessments of the material biocompatibility are performed on human dermal fibroblasts and murine muscle cells (C2C12), demonstrating that coatings or other treatments are not needed to use the acrylate-based materials as support. Moreover, it is found that adherent C2C12 cells undergo differentiation, forming multinucleated myotubes, which show the typical elongated shape, and contain bundles of stress fibers. Once biocompatibility is demonstrated, the same LCN films are used as a substrate for culturing human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocites (hiPSC-CMs) proving that LCNs are capable to develop adult-like dimensions and a more mature cell function in a short period of culture in respect to standard supports. The demonstrated biocompatibility together with the extraordinary features of LCNs opens to preparation of complex cell scaffolds, both patterned and stimulated, for dynamic cell culturing. The ability of these materials to improve cell maturation and differentiation will be developed toward engineered heart and skeletal muscular tissues exploring regenerative medicine toward bioartificial muscles for injured sites replacement.


Materials | 2016

Photoresist Design for Elastomeric Light Tunable Photonic Devices

Sara Nocentini; Daniele Martella; Camilla Parmeggiani; Diederik S. Wiersma

An increasing interest in tunable photonic structures is growing within the photonic community. The usage of Liquid Crystalline Elastomer (LCE) structures in the micro-scale has been motivated by the potential to remotely control their properties. In order to design elastic photonic structures with a three-dimensional lithographic technique, an analysis of the different mixtures used in the micro-printing process is required. Previously reported LCE microstructures suffer damage and strong swelling as a limiting factor of resolution. In this article, we reported a detailed study on the writing process with four liquid crystalline photoresists, in which the percentage of crosslinker is gradually increased. The experiments reveal that exploiting the crosslinking degree is a possible means in which to obtain suspended lines with good resolution, quite good rigidity, and good elasticity, thereby preserving the possibility of deformation by light irradiation.


Advanced Materials | 2017

Photonic Microhand with Autonomous Action

Daniele Martella; Sara Nocentini; Dmitry Nuzhdin; Camilla Parmeggiani; Diederik S. Wiersma

Grabbing and holding objects at the microscale is a complex function, even for microscopic living animals. Inspired by the hominid-type hand, a microscopic equivalent able to catch microelements is engineered. This microhand is light sensitive and can be either remotely controlled by optical illumination or can act autonomously and grab small particles on the basis of their optical properties. Since the energy is delivered optically, without the need for wires or batteries, the artificial hand can be shrunk down to the micrometer scale. Soft material is used, in particular, a custom-made liquid-crystal network that is patterned by a photolithographic technique. The elastic reshaping properties of this material allow finger movement, using environmental light as the only energy source. The hand can be either controlled externally (via the light field), or else the conditions in which it autonomously grabs a particle in its vicinity can be created. This microrobot has the unique feature that it can distinguish between particles of different colors and gray levels. The realization of this autonomous hand constitutes a crucial element in the development of microscopic creatures that can perform tasks without human intervention and self-organized automation at the micrometer scale.


Advanced Optical Materials | 2018

Structured Optical Materials Controlled by Light

Sara Nocentini; Daniele Martella; Camilla Parmeggiani; Simone Zanotto; Diederik S. Wiersma

Materials of which the optical response is determined by their structure are of much interest both for their fundamental properties and applications. Examples range from simple gratings to photonic crystals. Obtaining control over the optical properties is of crucial importance in this context, and it is often attempted by electro-optical effect or by using magnetic fields. In this paper, we introduce the use of light to switch and tune the optical response of a structured material, exploiting a physical deformation induced by light itself. In this new strategy, light drives an elastic reshaping, which leads to different spectral properties and hence to a change in the optical response. This is made possible by the use of liquid crystalline networks structured by Direct Laser Writing. As a proof of concept, a grating structure with sub-millisecond time-response is demonstrated for optical beam steering exploiting an optically induced reversible shape-change. Experimental observations are combined with finite-element modeling to understand the actuation process dynamics and to obtain information on how to tune the time and the power response of this technology. This optical beam steerer serves as an example for achieving full optical control of light in broad range of structured optical materials.

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Camilla Parmeggiani

European Laboratory for Non-Linear Spectroscopy

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Diederik S. Wiersma

European Laboratory for Non-Linear Spectroscopy

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Hao Zeng

European Laboratory for Non-Linear Spectroscopy

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Sara Nocentini

European Laboratory for Non-Linear Spectroscopy

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Giacomo Cerretti

European Laboratory for Non-Linear Spectroscopy

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Matteo Burresi

European Laboratory for Non-Linear Spectroscopy

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