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Dive into the research topics where Federico La China is active.

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Featured researches published by Federico La China.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Deep-subwavelength imaging of both electric and magnetic localized optical fields by plasmonic campanile nanoantenna

Niccolò Caselli; Federico La China; Wei Bao; Francesco Riboli; Annamaria Gerardino; Lianhe Li; E. H. Linfield; Francesco Pagliano; Andrea Fiore; P. James Schuck; Stefano Cabrini; Alexander Weber-Bargioni; M. Gurioli; Francesca Intonti

Tailoring the electromagnetic field at the nanoscale has led to artificial materials exhibiting fascinating optical properties unavailable in naturally occurring substances. Besides having fundamental implications for classical and quantum optics, nanoscale metamaterials provide a platform for developing disruptive novel technologies, in which a combination of both the electric and magnetic radiation field components at optical frequencies is relevant to engineer the light-matter interaction. Thus, an experimental investigation of the spatial distribution of the photonic states at the nanoscale for both field components is of crucial importance. Here we experimentally demonstrate a concomitant deep-subwavelength near-field imaging of the electric and magnetic intensities of the optical modes localized in a photonic crystal nanocavity. We take advantage of the “campanile tip”, a plasmonic near-field probe that efficiently combines broadband field enhancement with strong far-field to near-field coupling. By exploiting the electric and magnetic polarizability components of the campanile tip along with the perturbation imaging method, we are able to map in a single measurement both the electric and magnetic localized near-field distributions.


APL Photonics | 2016

Spatial steadiness of individual disorder modes upon controlled spectral tuning

Niccolò Caselli; Francesco Riboli; Francesca Intonti; Federico La China; Francesco Biccari; Annamaria Gerardino; M. Gurioli

Recent innovative applications in disordered photonics would strongly benefit from the possibility to achieve spectral tuning of the individual disorder localized photonic modes without affecting their spatial distributions. Here, we design and fabricate a two-dimensional disordered photonic system, made of a GaAs slab patterned with randomly distributed circular air scattering centers, supporting localized light modes with very small modal volume. The photoluminescence of InAs quantum dots embedded in the slab is used as a probe for near field experiments and gives direct access to the electric field intensity distribution of the localized random modes. We demonstrate that laser assisted oxidation of the GaAs slab performed by near field illumination can be used for a gentle tuning of the individual random modes without modifying the subtle balance leading to light localization given by multiple scattering.


Nature Communications | 2018

Generalized Fano lineshapes reveal exceptional points in photonic molecules

Niccolò Caselli; Francesca Intonti; Federico La China; Francesco Biccari; Francesco Riboli; Annamaria Gerardino; Lianhe Li; E. H. Linfield; Francesco Pagliano; Andrea Fiore; M. Gurioli

The optical behavior of coupled systems, in which the breaking of parity and time-reversal symmetry occurs, is drawing increasing attention to address the physics of the exceptional point singularity, i.e., when the real and imaginary parts of the normal-mode eigenfrequencies coincide. At this stage, fascinating phenomena are predicted, including electromagnetic-induced transparency and phase transitions. To experimentally observe the exceptional points, the near-field coupling to waveguide proposed so far was proved to work only in peculiar cases. Here, we extend the interference detection scheme, which lies at the heart of the Fano lineshape, by introducing generalized Fano lineshapes as a signature of the exceptional point occurrence in resonant-scattering experiments. We investigate photonic molecules and necklace states in disordered media by means of a near-field hyperspectral mapping. Generalized Fano profiles in material science could extend the characterization of composite nanoresonators, semiconductor nanostructures, and plasmonic and metamaterial devices.Fano lineshapes are found in many photonic systems where discrete and extended spectra interfere. Here, the authors extend this description and introduce generalized Fano lineshapes to describe the results from hyperspectral mapping around an exceptional point in a coupled-cavity system.


international conference on group iv photonics | 2017

Integration of carbon nanotubes on silicon photonics resonators

Elena Durán-Valdeiglesias; Weiwei Zhang; Thi-Hong-Cam Hoang; C. Alonso-Ramos; Xavier Le Roux; Samuel Serna; Matteo Balestrieri; Delphine Marris-Morini; Francesca Intonti; Francesco Sarti; Niccolò Caselli; Federico La China; Francesco Biccari; M. Gurioli; Arianna Filoramo; Eric Cassan; Laurent Vivien

We report on the integration of carbon nanotubes in silicon micro-cavities to develop cost-effective light sources. Strong light coupling from carbon nanotubes was demonstrated into silicon photonics resonators, nanobeam cavities and photonic crystals.


SPIE Proceedings Series | 2017

Hybrid integration of carbon nanotubes in silicon photonic structures

Elena Durán-Valdeiglesias; Weiwei Zhang; Carlos Alonso-Ramos; Xavier Le Roux; Samuel Serna; Thihong Cam Hoang; Delphine Marris-Morini; Eric Cassan; Francesca Intonti; Francesco Sarti; Niccolò Caselli; Federico La China; M. Gurioli; Matteo Balestrieri; Laurent Vivien; Arianna Filoramo

Silicon photonics, due to its compatibility with the CMOS platform and unprecedented integration capability, has become the preferred solution for the implementation of next generation optical interconnects to accomplish high efficiency, low energy consumption, low cost and device miniaturization in one single chip. However, it is restricted by silicon itself. Silicon does not have efficient light emission or detection in the telecommunication wavelength range (1.3 μm-1.5 μm) or any electro-optic effect (i.e. Pockels effect). Hence, silicon photonic needs to be complemented with other materials for the realization of optically-active devices, including III-V for lasing and Ge for detection. The very different requirement of these materials results in complex fabrication processes that offset the cost-effectiveness of the Si photonics approach. For this purpose, carbon nanotubes (CNTs) have recently been proposed as an attractive one-dimensional light emitting material. Interestingly, semiconducting single walled CNTs (SWNTs) exhibit room-temperature photoand electro-luminescence in the near-IR that could be exploited for the implementation of integrated nano-sources. They can also be considered for the realization of photo-detectors and optical modulators, since they rely on intrinsically fast non-linear effects, such as Stark and Kerr effect. All these properties make SWNTs ideal candidates in order to fabricate a large variety of optoelectronic devices, including near-IR sources, modulators and photodetectors on Si photonic platforms. In addition, solution processed SWNTs can be integrated on Si using spin-coating or drop-casting techniques, obviating the need of complex epitaxial growth or chip bonding approaches. Here, we report on our recent progress in the coupling of SWNTs light emission into optical resonators implemented on the silicon-on-insulator (SOI) platform.


Applied Physics Letters | 2017

Near-field speckle imaging of light localization in disordered photonic systems

Niccolò Caselli; Francesca Intonti; Federico La China; Francesco Biccari; Francesco Riboli; Annamaria Gerardino; Lianhe Li; E. H. Linfield; Francesco Pagliano; Andrea Fiore; M. Gurioli

Optical localization in strongly disordered photonic media is an attractive topic for proposing novel cavity-like structures. Light interference can produce random modes confined within small volumes, whose spatial distribution in the near-field is predicted to show hot spots at the nanoscale. However, these near-field speckles have not yet been experimentally investigated due to the lack of a high spatial resolution imaging techniques. Here, we study a system where the disorder is induced by random drilling air holes in a GaAs suspended membrane with internal InAs quantum dots. We perform deep-subwavelength near-field experiments in the telecom window to directly image the spatial distribution of the electric field intensity of disordered-induced localized optical modes. We retrieve the near-field speckle patterns that extend over few micrometers and show several single speckles of the order of λ/10 size. The results are compared with the numerical calculations and with the recent findings in the literat...


Proceedings of SPIE | 2016

Coupling of semiconductor carbon nanotubes emission with silicon photonic micro ring resonators

Francesco Sarti; Niccolò Caselli; Federico La China; Francesco Biccari; Ughetta Torrini; Francesca Intonti; A. Vinattieri; Elena Durán-Valdeiglesias; Weiwei Zhang; Adrien Noury; C. Alonso-Ramos; Thihong Cam Hoang; Samuel Serna; Xavier Le Roux; Eric Cassan; Nicolas Izard; Hongliu Yang; Viktor Bezugly; Gianaurelio Cuniberti; Arianna Filoramo; Laurent Vivien; M. Gurioli

Hybrid structures are needed to fully exploit the great advantages of Si photonics and several approaches have been addressed where Si devices are bonded to different materials and nanostructures. Here we study the use of semiconductor carbon nanotubes for emission in the 1300 nm wavelength range to functionalize Si photonic structures in view of optoelectronic applications. The Si micro-rings are fully characterized by near field forward resonant scattering with 100 nm resolution. We show that both TE and TM modes can be addressed on the top of the micro-rings in a vectorial imaging of the in-plane polarization components. We coupled the Si micro-resonators with selected carbon nanotubes for high photoluminescence emission. Coupling nanotubes with the evanescent tails in air of the electric field localized in the photonic modes of the micro-resonators is demonstrated by sharp resonances over imposed to the nanotube emission bands. By mapping the Si and the nanotube emission we demonstrate that strong enhancement of the nanotube photoluminescence can be achieved both in the photonic modes of micro-disks and slot micro-rings, whenever the spatial overlap between nano-emitters and photonic modes is fulfilled.


Light-Science & Applications | 2015

Ultra-subwavelength phase-sensitive Fano-imaging of localized photonic modes

Niccolò Caselli; Francesca Intonti; Federico La China; Francesco Riboli; Annamaria Gerardino; Wei Bao; Alexander Weber Bargioni; Lianhe Li; E. H. Linfield; Francesco Pagliano; Andrea Fiore; M. Gurioli


ACS Photonics | 2015

Tailoring the Photon Hopping by Nearest-Neighbor and Next-Nearest-Neighbor Interaction in Photonic Arrays

Niccolò Caselli; Francesco Riboli; Federico La China; Annamaria Gerardino; Lianhe Li; E. H. Linfield; Francesco Pagliano; Andrea Fiore; Francesca Intonti; M. Gurioli


ACS Photonics | 2015

Near-Field Fano-Imaging of TE and TM Modes in Silicon Microrings

Federico La China; Francesca Intonti; Niccolò Caselli; Francesco Lotti; Francesco Sarti; A. Vinattieri; Adrien Noury; Xavier Le Roux; Weiwei Zhang; Eric Cassan; Carlos Ramos; Elena Durán Valdeiglesias; Nicolas Izard; Laurent Vivien; M. Gurioli

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M. Gurioli

University of Florence

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Francesco Riboli

European Laboratory for Non-Linear Spectroscopy

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Francesco Pagliano

Eindhoven University of Technology

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Andrea Fiore

Eindhoven University of Technology

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