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Dive into the research topics where Erika Giangrisostomi is active.

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Featured researches published by Erika Giangrisostomi.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2017

Partially Reversible Photoinduced Chemical Changes in a Mixed-Ion Perovskite Material for Solar Cells

Ute B. Cappel; Sebastian Svanström; Valeria Lanzilotto; Fredrik O. L. Johansson; Kerttu Aitola; Bertrand Philippe; Erika Giangrisostomi; Ruslan Ovsyannikov; Torsten Leitner; Alexander Foehlisch; S. Svensson; Nils Mårtensson; Gerrit Boschloo; Andreas Lindblad; Håkan Rensmo

Metal halide perovskites have emerged as materials of high interest for solar energy-to-electricity conversion, and in particular, the use of mixed-ion structures has led to high power conversion efficiencies and improved stability. For this reason, it is important to develop means to obtain atomic level understanding of the photoinduced behavior of these materials including processes such as photoinduced phase separation and ion migration. In this paper, we implement a new methodology combining visible laser illumination of a mixed-ion perovskite ((FAPbI3)0.85(MAPbBr3)0.15) with the element specificity and chemical sensitivity of core-level photoelectron spectroscopy. By carrying out measurements at a synchrotron beamline optimized for low X-ray fluxes, we are able to avoid sample changes due to X-ray illumination and are therefore able to monitor what sample changes are induced by visible illumination only. We find that laser illumination causes partially reversible chemistry in the surface region, including enrichment of bromide at the surface, which could be related to a phase separation into bromide- and iodide-rich phases. We also observe a partially reversible formation of metallic lead in the perovskite structure. These processes occur on the time scale of minutes during illumination. The presented methodology has a large potential for understanding light-induced chemistry in photoactive materials and could specifically be extended to systematically study the impact of morphology and composition on the photostability of metal halide perovskites.


Structural Dynamics | 2016

Free electron laser-driven ultrafast rearrangement of the electronic structure in Ti

Emiliano Principi; Erika Giangrisostomi; Riccardo Cucini; Filippo Bencivenga; Andrea Battistoni; Alessandro Gessini; R. Mincigrucci; Makina Saito; S. Di Fonzo; Francesco D'Amico; A. Di Cicco; R. Gunnella; Adriano Filipponi; A. Giglia; S. Nannarone; C. Masciovecchio

High-energy density extreme ultraviolet radiation delivered by the FERMI seeded free-electron laser has been used to create an exotic nonequilibrium state of matter in a titanium sample characterized by a highly excited electron subsystem at temperatures in excess of 10 eV and a cold solid-density ion lattice. The obtained transient state has been investigated through ultrafast absorption spectroscopy across the Ti M2,3-edge revealing a drastic rearrangement of the sample electronic structure around the Fermi level occurring on a time scale of about 100 fs.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Reflectivity enhancement in titanium by ultrafast XUV irradiation

Filippo Bencivenga; Emiliano Principi; Erika Giangrisostomi; Riccardo Cucini; Andrea Battistoni; Francesco D'Amico; A. Di Cicco; S. Di Fonzo; Adriano Filipponi; Alessandro Gessini; R. Gunnella; M. Marsi; L. Properzi; Makina Saito; C. Masciovecchio

The study of highly photo-excited matter at solid state density is an emerging field of research, which is benefitting the development of free-electron-laser (FEL) technology. We report an extreme ultraviolet (XUV) reflectivity experiment from a titanium (Ti) sample irradiated with ultrafast seeded FEL pulses at variable incident photon fluence and frequency. Using a Drude formalism we relate the observed increase in reflectivity as a function of the excitation fluence to an increase in the plasma frequency, which allows us to estimate the free electron density in the excited sample. The extreme simplicity of the experimental setup makes the present approach potentially a valuable complementary tool to determine the average ionization state of the excited sample, information of primary relevance for understanding the physics of matter under extreme conditions.


Structural Dynamics | 2017

Time-resolved soft X-ray absorption spectroscopy in transmission mode on liquids at MHz repetition rates

Mattis Fondell; Sebastian Eckert; Raphael M. Jay; Christian Weniger; Wilson Quevedo; Johannes Niskanen; Brian Kennedy; Florian Sorgenfrei; Daniel Schick; Erika Giangrisostomi; Ruslan Ovsyannikov; Katrin Adamczyk; Nils Huse; Philippe Wernet; Rolf Mitzner; A. Föhlisch

We present a setup combining a liquid flatjet sample delivery and a MHz laser system for time-resolved soft X-ray absorption measurements of liquid samples at the high brilliance undulator beamline UE52-SGM at Bessy II yielding unprecedented statistics in this spectral range. We demonstrate that the efficient detection of transient absorption changes in transmission mode enables the identification of photoexcited species in dilute samples. With iron(II)-trisbipyridine in aqueous solution as a benchmark system, we present absorption measurements at various edges in the soft X-ray regime. In combination with the wavelength tunability of the laser system, the set-up opens up opportunities to study the photochemistry of many systems at low concentrations, relevant to materials sciences, chemistry, and biology.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

Spectrometer for single-shot x-ray emission and photon diagnostics

Fabio Frassetto; P. Miotti; C. Callegari; M. de Simone; P. Finetti; Erika Giangrisostomi; Cesare Grazioli; F. Iesari; A. Kivimäki; R. Mincigrucci; Emiliano Principi; S. Stagira; A. Di Cicco; M. Coreno; Luca Poletto

We present the design and characterization of a compact and portable spectrometer realized for photon in-photon out experiments (in particular X-Ray Emission Spectroscopy, XES), in particular tailored to be used at the FERMI freeelectron- laser (FEL) at ELETTRA (Italy). The spectrometer can be installed on different end stations at variable distances from the target area both at synchrotron and FEL beamlines. Different input sections can be accommodated in order to fit the experimental requests, with/without an entrance slit and with/without an additional relay mirror. The design is compact in order to realize a portable instrument within a total footprint of less than one square meter. The instrument is based on the use of two flat-field grazing-incidence gratings and an EUV-enhanced CCD detector to cover the 25-800 eV spectral range, with spectral resolution better than 0.2%. The absolute response of the spectrometer, has been measured in the whole spectral region of operation, allowing calibrated measurements of the photon flux. The characterization on the Gas Phase beamline at ELETTRA Synchrotron as instrument for XES and some experimental data of the FEL emission taken at EIS-TIMEX beamline at FERMI, where the instrument has been used for photon beam diagnostics, are presented.


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2018

Effect of halide ratio and Cs+ addition on the photochemical stability of lead halide perovskites

Sebastian Svanström; T. Jesper Jacobsson; Tamara Sloboda; Erika Giangrisostomi; Ruslan Ovsyannikov; Håkan Rensmo; Ute B. Cappel

Lead halide perovskite solar cells with multi-cation/mixed halide materials now give power conversion efficiencies of more than 20%. The stability of these mixed materials has been significantly improved through the addition of Cs+ compared to the original methylammonium lead iodide. However, it remains one of the most significant challenges for commercialisation. In this study, we use photoelectron spectroscopy (PES) in combination with visible laser illumination to study the photo-stability of perovskite films with different compositions. These include Br : I ratios of 50 : 50 and 17 : 83 and compositions with and without Cs+. For the samples without Cs and the 50 : 50 samples, we found that the surface was enriched in Br and depleted in I during illumination and that some of the perovskite decomposed into Pb0, organic halide salts, and iodine. After illumination, both of these reactions were partially reversible. Furthermore, the surfaces of the films were enriched in organic halide salts indicating that the cations were not degraded into volatile products. With the addition of Cs+ to the samples, photo-induced changes were significantly suppressed for a 50 : 50 bromide to iodide ratio and completely suppressed for perovskites with a 17 : 83 ratio at light intensities exceeding 1 sun equivalent.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2018

Spectroscopic Fingerprints of Intermolecular H-Bonding Interactions in Carbon Nitride Model Compounds

Valeria Lanzilotto; J. Luis Silva; Teng Zhang; Matus Stredansky; Cesare Grazioli; Konstantin A. Simonov; Erika Giangrisostomi; Ruslan Ovsyannikov; Monica de Simone; M. Coreno; C. Moysés Araújo; Barbara Brena; Carla Puglia

The effect of intermolecular H-bonding interactions on the local electronic structure of N-containing functional groups (amino group and pyridine-like N) that are characteristic of polymeric carbon nitride materials p-CN(H), a new class of metal-free organophotocatalysts, was investigated. Specifically, the melamine molecule, a building block of p-CN(H), was characterized by X-ray photoelectron (XPS) and near edge X-ray absorption fine structure (NEXAFS) spectroscopy. The molecule was studied as a noninteracting system in the gas phase and in the solid state within a H-bonded network. With the support of DFT simulations of the spectra, it was found that the H-bonds mainly affect the N 1s level of the amino group, leaving the N 1s level of the pyridine-like N mostly unperturbed. This is responsible for a reduction of the chemical shift between the two XPS N 1s levels relative to free melamine. Consequently, N K-edge NEXAFS resonances involving the amino N 1s level also shift to lower photon energies. Moreover, the solid-state absorption spectra showed significant modification/quenching of resonances related to transitions from the amino N 1s level to σ* orbitals involving the NH2 termini.


ChemPhysChem | 2018

Electronic Structure Characterization of Cross-Linked Sulfur Polymers

Ute B. Cappel; Peng Liu; Fredrik O. L. Johansson; Bertrand Philippe; Erika Giangrisostomi; Ruslan Ovsyannikov; Andreas Lindblad; Lars Kloo; James M. Gardner; Håkan Rensmo

Cross-linked polymers of elemental sulfur are of potential interest for electronic applications as they enable facile thin-film processing of an abundant and inexpensive starting material. Here, we characterize the electronic structure of a cross-linked sulfur/diisopropenyl benzene (DIB) polymer by a combination of soft and hard X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (SOXPES and HAXPES). Two different approaches for enhancing the conductivity of the polymer are compared: the addition of selenium in the polymer synthesis and the addition of lithium bis(trifluoromethanesulfonyl)imide (LiTFSI) during film preparation. For the former, we observe the incorporation of Se into the polymer structure resulting in a changed valence-band structure. For the latter, a Fermi level shift in agreement with p-type doping of the polymer is observed and also the formation of a surface layer consisting mostly of TFSI anions.


PROCEEDINGS FOR THE XV LIQUID AND AMORPHOUS METALS (LAM-15) INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE | 2015

Matter under extreme conditions probed by a seeded free-electron-laser

Filippo Bencivenga; Emiliano Principi; Erika Giangrisostomi; Andrea Battistoni; Riccardo Cucini; M.B. Danailov; Alexander Demidovich; A. Di Cicco; Francesco D’Amico; S. Di Fonzo; Adriano Filipponi; Alessandro Gessini; R. Gunnella; Keisuke Hatada; N. Kurdi; N. Mahne; R. Mincigrucci; Lorenzo Raimondi; Cristian Svetina; M. Zangrando; C. Masciovecchio

FERMI is the first user dedicated seeded free-electron-laser (FEL) working in the extreme ultraviolet (XUV) and soft x-ray range. The EIS-TIMEX experimental end-station was availabe to external users since from the beginning of the user operation of the facility, in Dicember 2012. EIS-TIMEX has been conceived to exploit the unique properties of the FERMI source to study matter under extreme and metastable thermodynamic conditions. We hereby report on its basic parameters and applications, which includes very low jitter (i.e., high time resolution) pump-probe measurements.


Journal of Electron Spectroscopy and Related Phenomena | 2017

Low Dose Photoelectron Spectroscopy at BESSY II: Electronic structure of matter in its native state

Erika Giangrisostomi; Ruslan Ovsyannikov; Florian Sorgenfrei; Teng Zhang; Andreas Lindblad; Y. Sassa; Ute B. Cappel; Torsten Leitner; Rolf Mitzner; S. Svensson; Nils Mårtensson; Alexander Föhlisch

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A. Di Cicco

University of Camerino

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Emiliano Principi

Elettra Sincrotrone Trieste

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