Fabio Novelli
University of Trieste
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Fabio Novelli.
Nature Materials | 2013
S. de Jong; Roopali Kukreja; Christoph Trabant; N. Pontius; C. F. Chang; T. Kachel; M. Beye; F. Sorgenfrei; C. H. Back; Björn Bräuer; W. F. Schlotter; J. J. Turner; O. Krupin; M. Doehler; Diling Zhu; M. A. Hossain; Andreas Scherz; Daniele Fausti; Fabio Novelli; Martina Esposito; Wei-Sheng Lee; Yi-De Chuang; D. H. Lu; R. G. Moore; M. Yi; M. Trigo; Patrick S. Kirchmann; L. Pathey; M. S. Golden; M. Buchholz
As the oldest known magnetic material, magnetite (Fe3O4) has fascinated mankind for millennia. As the first oxide in which a relationship between electrical conductivity and fluctuating/localized electronic order was shown, magnetite represents a model system for understanding correlated oxides in general. Nevertheless, the exact mechanism of the insulator-metal, or Verwey, transition has long remained inaccessible. Recently, three-Fe-site lattice distortions called trimerons were identified as the characteristic building blocks of the low-temperature insulating electronically ordered phase. Here we investigate the Verwey transition with pump-probe X-ray diffraction and optical reflectivity techniques, and show how trimerons become mobile across the insulator-metal transition. We find this to be a two-step process. After an initial 300 fs destruction of individual trimerons, phase separation occurs on a 1.5±0.2 ps timescale to yield residual insulating and metallic regions. This work establishes the speed limit for switching in future oxide electronics.
Scientific Reports | 2013
Fabio Novelli; Daniele Fausti; Francesca Giusti; F. Parmigiani; Matthias W. Hoffmann
Significant changes of the optical properties of semiconductors can be observed by applying strong electric fields capable to modify the band structure at equilibrium. This is known as the Franz-Keldysh effect (FKE). Here we study the FKE in bulk GaAs by combining single cycle THz pumps and broadband optical probes. The experiments show that the phase content of the selected electromagnetic pulses can be used to measure the timescales characteristic for the different regimes of matter-light interactions. Furthermore, the present phase-resolved measurements allow to identify a novel regime of saturation where memory effects are of relevance.
Nature Communications | 2014
Fabio Novelli; Giulio De Filippis; V. Cataudella; Martina Esposito; Ignacio Vergara; Federico Cilento; Enrico Sindici; A. Amaricci; Claudio Giannetti; D. Prabhakaran; Simon Wall; A. Perucchi; Stefano Dal Conte; Giulio Cerullo; Massimo Capone; A. S. Mishchenko; M. Grüninger; Naoto Nagaosa; F. Parmigiani; Daniele Fausti
The non-equilibrium approach to correlated electron systems is often based on the paradigm that different degrees of freedom interact on different timescales. In this context, photo-excitation is treated as an impulsive injection of electronic energy that is transferred to other degrees of freedom only at later times. Here, by studying the ultrafast dynamics of quasi-particles in an archetypal strongly correlated charge-transfer insulator (La2CuO(4+δ)), we show that the interaction between electrons and bosons manifests itself directly in the photo-excitation processes of a correlated material. With the aid of a general theoretical framework (Hubbard-Holstein Hamiltonian), we reveal that sub-gap excitation pilots the formation of itinerant quasi-particles, which are suddenly dressed by an ultrafast reaction of the bosonic field.
Physical Review B | 2012
Fabio Novelli; Daniele Fausti; Julia Reul; Federico Cilento; Paul H. M. van Loosdrecht; A. A. Nugroho; Thomas Palstra; M. Grueninger; F. Parmigiani
We use broadband ultra-fast pump-probe spectroscopy in the visible range to study the lowest excitations across the Mott-Hubbard gap in the orbitally ordered insulator YVO3. Separating thermal and non-thermal contributions to the optical transients, we show that the total spectral weight of the two lowest peaks is conserved, demonstrating that both excitations correspond to the same multiplet. The pump-induced transfer of spectral weight between the two peaks reveals that the low-energy one is a Hubbard exciton, i.e. a resonance or bound state between a doublon and a holon. Finally, we speculate that the pump-driven spin-disorder can be used to quantify the kinetic energy gain of the excitons in the ferromagnetic phase.
Physical Review B | 2012
Fabio Novelli; Daniele Fausti; Julia Reul; Federico Cilento; P.H.M. van Loosdrecht; A. A. Nugroho; Thomas Palstra; M. Grüninger; Fulivo Parmigiani
We use broadband ultra-fast pump-probe spectroscopy in the visible range to study the lowest excitations across the Mott-Hubbard gap in the orbitally ordered insulator YVO3. Separating thermal and non-thermal contributions to the optical transients, we show that the total spectral weight of the two lowest peaks is conserved, demonstrating that both excitations correspond to the same multiplet. The pump-induced transfer of spectral weight between the two peaks reveals that the low-energy one is a Hubbard exciton, i.e. a resonance or bound state between a doublon and a holon. Finally, we speculate that the pump-driven spin-disorder can be used to quantify the kinetic energy gain of the excitons in the ferromagnetic phase.
Physical Review B | 2016
Francesco Randi; Ignacio Vergara; Fabio Novelli; Martina Esposito; Martina Dell'Angela; V. A. M. Brabers; P. Metcalf; Roopali Kukreja; Hermann A. Dürr; Daniele Fausti; M. Grüninger; F. Parmigiani
We present equilibrium and out-of-equilibrium studies of the Verwey transition in magnetite. In the equilibrium optical conductivity, we find a steplike change at the phase transition for photon energies below about 2 eV. The possibility of triggering a nonequilibrium transient metallic state in insulating magnetite by photo excitation was recently demonstrated by an x-ray study. Here we report a full characterization of the optical properties in the visible frequency range across the nonequilibrium phase transition. Our analysis of the spectral features is based on a detailed description of the equilibrium properties. The out-of-equilibrium optical data bear the initial electronic response associated to localized photoexcitation, the occurrence of phase separation, and the transition to a transient metallic phase for excitation density larger than a critical value. This allows us to identify the electronic nature of the transient state, to unveil the phase transition dynamics, and to study the consequences of phase separation on the reflectivity, suggesting a spectroscopic feature that may be generally linked to out-of-equilibrium phase separation.
New Journal of Physics | 2014
Martina Esposito; Fabio Benatti; Roberto Floreanini; Stefano Olivares; Francesco Randi; Kelvin Titimbo; Marco Pividori; Fabio Novelli; Federico Cilento; F. Parmigiani; Daniele Fausti
Pulsed homodyne quantum tomography usually requires a high detection efficiency, limiting its applicability in quantum optics. Here, it is shown that the presence of low detection efficiency () does not prevent the tomographic reconstruction of quantum states of light, specifically, of Gaussian states. This result is obtained by applying the so-called ?minimax? adaptive reconstruction of the Wigner function to pulsed homodyne detection. In particular, we prove, by both numerical and real experiments, that an effective discrimination of different Gaussian quantum states can be achieved. Our finding paves the way to a more extensive use of quantum tomographic methods, even in physical situations in which high detection efficiency is unattainable.
Physical Review B | 2017
Fabio Novelli; Gianluca Giovannetti; Adolfo Avella; Federico Cilento; L. Patthey; M. Radovic; Massimo Capone; F. Parmigiani; Daniele Fausti
arXiv: Optics | 2013
Martina Esposito; Daniele Fausti; Stefano Olivares; Fabio Benatti; Roberto Floreanini; Fabio Novelli; Federico Cilento; Francesco Randi; F. Parmigiani
arXiv: Superconductivity | 2017
Fabio Novelli; Jonathan O. Tollerud; D. Prabhakaran; Jeffrey A. Davis