Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Felice Torrisi is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Felice Torrisi.


ACS Nano | 2010

Graphene mode-locked ultrafast laser.

Zhipei Sun; Tawfique Hasan; Felice Torrisi; Daniel Popa; Giulia Privitera; Fengqiu Wang; Francesco Bonaccorso; D. M. Basko; A. C. Ferrari

Graphene is at the center of a significant research effort. Near-ballistic transport at room temperature and high mobility make it a potential material for nanoelectronics. Its electronic and mechanical properties are also ideal for micro- and nanomechanical systems, thin-film transistors, and transparent and conductive composites and electrodes. Here we exploit the optoelectronic properties of graphene to realize an ultrafast laser. A graphene-polymer composite is fabricated using wet-chemistry techniques. Pauli blocking following intense illumination results in saturable absorption, independent of wavelength. This is used to passively mode-lock an erbium-doped fiber laser working at 1559 nm, with a 5.24 nm spectral bandwidth and approximately 460 fs pulse duration, paving the way to graphene-based photonics.


ACS Nano | 2012

Inkjet-printed graphene electronics.

Felice Torrisi; Tawfique Hasan; Weiping Wu; Zhipei Sun; A. Lombardo; T. S. Kulmala; Gen-Wen Hsieh; Sungjune Jung; Francesco Bonaccorso; Philip J. Paul; Daping Chu; A. C. Ferrari

We demonstrate inkjet printing as a viable method for large-area fabrication of graphene devices. We produce a graphene-based ink by liquid phase exfoliation of graphite in N-methylpyrrolidone. We use it to print thin-film transistors, with mobilities up to ∼95 cm(2) V(-1) s(-1), as well as transparent and conductive patterns, with ∼80% transmittance and ∼30 kΩ/□ sheet resistance. This paves the way to all-printed, flexible, and transparent graphene devices on arbitrary substrates.


Applied Physics Letters | 2010

Sub 200 fs pulse generation from a graphene mode-locked fiber laser

Daniel Popa; Zhipei Sun; Felice Torrisi; Tawfique Hasan; Fengqiu Wang; A. C. Ferrari

Ultrafast fiber lasers with broad bandwidth are in great demand for a variety of applications, such as spectroscopy, biomedical diagnosis, and optical communications. Sub 200 fs pulses are required for ultrafast spectroscopy with high temporal resolution. Graphene is an ideal ultrawide-band saturable absorber. We report the generation of 174 fs pulses from a graphene-based fiber laser.


Applied Physics Letters | 2011

Graphene Q-switched, tunable fiber laser

Daniel Popa; Zhipei Sun; Tawfique Hasan; Felice Torrisi; Fengqiu Wang; A. C. Ferrari

We demonstrate a wideband-tunable Q-switched fiber laser exploiting a graphene saturable absorber. We get ∼2 μs pulses, tunable between 1522 and 1555 nm with up to ∼40 nJ energy. This is a simple and low-cost light source for metrology, environmental sensing, and biomedical diagnostics.


Optics Express | 2012

Tm-doped fiber laser mode-locked by graphene-polymer composite

Meng Zhang; E. J. R. Kelleher; Felice Torrisi; Zhipei Sun; Tawfique Hasan; Daniel Popa; Fengqiu Wang; A. C. Ferrari; S. V. Popov; J.R. Taylor

We demonstrate mode-locking of a thulium-doped fiber laser operating at 1.94 μm, using a graphene-polymer based saturable absorber. The laser outputs 3.6 ps pulses, with ~0.4 nJ energy and an amplitude fluctuation ~0.5%, at 6.46 MHz. This is a simple, low-cost, stable and convenient laser oscillator for applications where eye-safe and low-photon-energy light sources are required, such as sensing and biomedical diagnostics.


Optics Express | 2014

Tunable Q-switched fiber laser based on saturable edge-state absorption in few-layer molybdenum disulfide (MoS₂).

Robert I. Woodward; E. J. R. Kelleher; Richard C. T. Howe; Guohua Hu; Felice Torrisi; Tawfique Hasan; S. V. Popov; Taylor

We fabricate a few-layer molybdenum disulfide (MoS₂) polymer composite saturable absorber by liquid-phase exfoliation, and use this to passively Q-switch an ytterbium-doped fiber laser, tunable from 1030 to 1070 nm. Self-starting Q-switching generates 2.88 μs pulses at 74 kHz repetition rate, with over 100 nJ pulse energy. We propose a mechanism, based on edge states within the bandgap, responsible for the wideband nonlinear optical absorption exhibited by our few-layer MoS₂ sample, despite operating at photon energies lower than the material bandgap.


Nano Research | 2015

Solution processed MoS2-PVA composite for sub-bandgap mode-locking of a wideband tunable ultrafast er:fiber laser

Meng Zhang; Richard C. T. Howe; Robert I. Woodward; Edmund J. R. Kelleher; Felice Torrisi; Guohua Hu; S. V. Popov; J. Roy Taylor; Tawfique Hasan

We fabricate a free-standing few-layer molybdenum disulfide (MoS2)-polymer composite by liquid phase exfoliation of chemically pristine MoS2 crystals and use this to demonstrate a wideband tunable, ultrafast mode-locked fiber laser. Stable, picosecond pulses, tunable from 1,535 nm to 1,565 nm, are generated, corresponding to photon energies below the MoS2 material bandgap. These results contribute to the growing body of work studying the nonlinear optical properties of transition metal dichalcogenides that present new opportunities for ultrafast photonic applications.


Optics Express | 2015

Wideband saturable absorption in few-layer molybdenum diselenide (MoSe₂) for Q-switching Yb-, Er- and Tm-doped fiber lasers.

Robert I. Woodward; Richard C. T. Howe; T. H. Runcorn; Guohua Hu; Felice Torrisi; E. J. R. Kelleher; Tawfique Hasan

We fabricate a free-standing molybdenum diselenide (MoSe2) saturable absorber by embedding liquid-phase exfoliated few-layer MoSe2 flakes into a polymer film. The MoSe2-polymer composite is used to Q-switch fiber lasers based on ytterbium (Yb), erbium (Er) and thulium (Tm) gain fiber, producing trains of microsecond-duration pulses with kilohertz repetition rates at 1060 nm, 1566 nm and 1924 nm, respectively. Such operating wavelengths correspond to sub-bandgap saturable absorption in MoSe2, which is explained in the context of edge-states, building upon studies of other semiconducting transition metal dichalcogenide (TMD)-based saturable absorbers. Our work adds few-layer MoSe2 to the growing catalog of TMDs with remarkable optical properties, which offer new opportunities for photonic devices.


Photonics Research | 2015

Few-layer MoS 2 saturable absorbers for short-pulse laser technology: current status and future perspectives [Invited]

Robert I. Woodward; Richard C. T. Howe; Guohua Hu; Felice Torrisi; Meng Zhang; Tawfique Hasan; E. J. R. Kelleher

Few-layer molybdenum disulfide (MoS2) is emerging as a promising quasi-two-dimensional material for photonics and optoelectronics, further extending the library of suitable layered nanomaterials with exceptional optical properties for use in saturable absorber devices that enable short-pulse generation in laser systems. In this work, we catalog and review the nonlinear optical properties of few-layer MoS2, summarize recent progress in processing and integration into saturable absorber devices, and comment on the current status and future perspectives of MoS2-based pulsed lasers.


ACS Nano | 2016

Graphene-Based Interfaces Do Not Alter Target Nerve Cells

Alessandra Fabbro; Denis Scaini; Verónica León; Ester Vázquez; Giada Cellot; Giulia Privitera; Lucia Lombardi; Felice Torrisi; Flavia Tomarchio; Francesco Bonaccorso; Susanna Bosi; A. C. Ferrari; Laura Ballerini; Maurizio Prato

Neural-interfaces rely on the ability of electrodes to transduce stimuli into electrical patterns delivered to the brain. In addition to sensitivity to the stimuli, stability in the operating conditions and efficient charge transfer to neurons, the electrodes should not alter the physiological properties of the target tissue. Graphene is emerging as a promising material for neuro-interfacing applications, given its outstanding physico-chemical properties. Here, we use graphene-based substrates (GBSs) to interface neuronal growth. We test our GBSs on brain cell cultures by measuring functional and synaptic integrity of the emerging neuronal networks. We show that GBSs are permissive interfaces, even when uncoated by cell adhesion layers, retaining unaltered neuronal signaling properties, thus being suitable for carbon-based neural prosthetic devices.

Collaboration


Dive into the Felice Torrisi's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Daniel Popa

University of Cambridge

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Francesco Bonaccorso

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Tian Carey

University of Cambridge

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Zhe Jiang

University of Cambridge

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge