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Dive into the research topics where Francesco Rossella is active.

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Featured researches published by Francesco Rossella.


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2011

Charge transport in graphene–polythiophene blends as studied by Kelvin Probe Force Microscopy and transistor characterization

Andrea Liscio; Giulio Paolo Veronese; Emanuele Treossi; Francesco Suriano; Francesco Rossella; V. Bellani; Rita Rizzoli; Paolo Samorì; Vincenzo Palermo

Blends of reduced graphene oxide (RGO) and poly(3-hexylthiophene) (P3HT) are used as the active layer of field-effect transistors (FETs). By using sequential deposition of the two components, the density of RGO sheets can be tuned linearly, thereby modulating their contribution to the charge transport in the transistors, and the onset of charge percolation. The surface potential of RGO, P3HT and source–drain contacts is measured on the nanometric scale with Kelvin Probe Force Microscopy (KPFM), and correlated with the macroscopic performance of the FETs. KPFM is also used to monitor the potential decay along the channel in the working FETs.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2010

Effects of particle contamination and substrate interaction on the Raman response of unintentionally doped graphene

J. M. Caridad; Francesco Rossella; V. Bellani; M. Maicas; M. Patrini; E. Diez

We investigated the inhomogeneities in the charge density of unintentionally doped graphene on SiO2 prepared by mechanical exfoliation. From the analysis of the G, D, and 2D phonon modes of the Raman spectra after displacing contaminants on graphene surface, and measuring the separation monolayer-substrate distance among zones with different doping levels, we deduce that the interaction with the substrate is the main cause of doping in graphene rather than particle contamination. In particular, we show how graphene doping levels vary within the same flake depending on the distance between graphene and the substrate.


Advanced Materials | 2012

Metal-filled carbon nanotubes as a novel class of photothermal nanomaterials.

Francesco Rossella; Caterina Soldano; V. Bellani; Matteo Tommasini

Metal-filled carbon nanotubes represent a novel class of photothermal nanomaterials: when illuminated by visible light they exhibit a strong enhancement of the temperature at the metal sites, due to the enhanced plasmonic light absorption at the metal surface, which behaves as a heat radiator. Potential applications include nanomedicine, heat-assisted magnetic recording, and light-activated thermal gradient-driven devices.


Nano Letters | 2013

Giant thermovoltage in single InAs nanowire field-effect transistors.

Stefano Roddaro; Daniele Ercolani; Mian Akif Safeen; Soile Suomalainen; Francesco Rossella; Francesco Giazotto; Lucia Sorba; Fabio Beltram

Millivolt range thermovoltage is demonstrated in single InAs nanowire based field effect transistors. Thanks to a buried heating scheme, we drive both a large thermal bias ΔT > 10 K and a strong field-effect modulation of electric conductance on the nanostructures. This allows the precise mapping of the evolution of the Seebeck coefficient S as a function of the gate-controlled conductivity σ between room temperature and 100 K. Based on these experimental data a novel estimate of the electron mobility is given. This value is compared with the result of standard field-effect based mobility estimates and discussed in relation to the effect of charge traps in the devices.


ACS Nano | 2010

Cobalt nanocluster-filled carbon nanotube arrays: engineered photonic bandgap and optical reflectivity.

Caterina Soldano; Francesco Rossella; V. Bellani; Silvia Giudicatti; Swastik Kar

Perfect vertically aligned and periodically arranged arrays of multidielectric heterostructures are ideal platforms both for photonic crystals and photonic bandgap materials. Carbon nanotubes grown inside anodic alumina templates form a novel class of heterostructured materials ideally suited for building such platforms. By engineering metallic (cobalt) nanoclusters inside the nanotubes, we present a novel method for tailoring the photonic bandgap as well as the magnitude of the reflectivity in these systems. We present spectroscopic ellipsometry (SE) and reflectivity measurements to investigate the effect of the presence of cobalt clusters on the optical response of multiwall carbon nanotubes (MWNT) grown in anodized alumina template. The real (ε(1)) and imaginary (ε(2)) part of the pseudodielectric function of the MWNT and Co-MWNT system have been studied in a wide energy range (1.4-5 eV). We found that the cobalt filling modifies the electronic structure of the nanotubes, suggesting that the insertion of the clusters leads to a semiconductor behavior. Angle-resolved reflectivity measurements further show that the metal filling drastically enhances the optical response up to 2 orders of magnitude.


ChemPhysChem | 2012

Functionalization of Reduced Graphite Oxide Sheets with a Zwitterionic Surfactant

Beatriz Martín-García; M. Mercedes Velázquez; Francesco Rossella; V. Bellani; E. Diez; José Luis G. Fierro; Jose Antonio Pérez‐Hernández; Juan Hernández-Toro; Sergi Claramunt; A. Cirera

Films of a few layers in thickness of reduced graphite oxide (RGO) sheets functionalized by the zwitterionic surfactant N-dodecyl-N,N-dimethyl-3-ammonio-1-propanesulfonate (DDPS) are obtained by using the Langmuir-Blodgett method. The quality of the RGO sheets is checked by analyzing the degrees of reduction and defect repair by means of X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, atomic force microscopy (AFM), field-emission scanning electron microscopy (SEM), micro-Raman spectroscopy, and electrical conductivity measurements. A modified Hummers method is used to obtain highly oxidized graphite oxide (GO) together with a centrifugation-based method to improve the quality of GO. The GO samples are reduced by hydrazine or vitamin C. Functionalization of RGO with the zwitterionic surfactant improves the degrees of reduction and defect repair of the two reducing agents and significantly increases the electrical conductivity of paperlike films compared with those prepared from unfunctionalized RGO.


Nanomedicine: Nanotechnology, Biology and Medicine | 2010

Micro-Raman study of the role of sterilization on carbon nanotubes for biomedical applications

S. Bellucci; Massimo Chiaretti; P. Onorato; Francesco Rossella; Marco Simone Grandi; P. Galinetto; I. Sacco; F. Micciulla

AIM We investigate the effect of four different types of sterilization procedures on the structural properties and morphological features of single-wall carbon nanotube samples approachable by micro-Raman spectroscopy. Sterilization procedures (treatment in humid heat autoclave or ethylene oxide and irradiation with gamma-rays or UV light) are necessary in view of the use of carbon nanotube sterile samples in in vivo toxicity tests on laboratory rats. Micro-Raman spectroscopy allows us to estimate several details about the morphology of the single-wall carbon nanotube mixture (mainly the presence of disorder and diameter distribution) before and after the sterilization treatment. RESULTS The best of these treatments, in other words, the one that least affected the morphology and structural properties of carbon nanotubes, was found to be UV irradiation and has thus been selected for future in vivo tests on rats.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2014

Nanoscale spin rectifiers controlled by the Stark effect

Francesco Rossella; Andrea Bertoni; Daniele Ercolani; Massimo Rontani; Lucia Sorba; Fabio Beltram; Stefano Roddaro

The control of orbitals and spin states of single electrons is a key ingredient for quantum information processing and novel detection schemes and is, more generally, of great relevance for spintronics. Coulomb and spin blockade in double quantum dots enable advanced single-spin operations that would be available even for room-temperature applications with sufficiently small devices. To date, however, spin operations in double quantum dots have typically been observed at sub-kelvin temperatures, a key reason being that it is very challenging to scale a double quantum dot system while retaining independent field-effect control of individual dots. Here, we show that the quantum-confined Stark effect allows two dots only 5 nm apart to be independently addressed without the requirement for aligned nanometre-sized local gating. We thus demonstrate a scalable method to fully control a double quantum dot device, regardless of its physical size. In the present implementation we present InAs/InP nanowire double quantum dots that display an experimentally detectable spin blockade up to 10 K. We also report and discuss an unexpected re-entrant spin blockade lifting as a function of the magnetic field intensity.


New Journal of Physics | 2010

Plateau–insulator transition in graphene

M. Amado; E. Diez; D. López-Romero; Francesco Rossella; J. M. Caridad; Fabio Dionigi; V. Bellani; D. K. Maude

We investigate the quantum Hall effect (QHE) in a graphene sample with Hall-bar geometry close to the Dirac point at high magnetic fields up to 28 T. We have discovered a plateau–insulator quantum phase transition passing from the last plateau for the integer QHE in graphene to an insulator regime ν=−2→ν=0. The analysis of the temperature dependence of the longitudinal resistance gives a value for the critical exponent associated with the transition equal to κ=0.58±0.03.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Local noise in a diffusive conductor.

E. S. Tikhonov; D. V. Shovkun; D. Ercolani; Francesco Rossella; Mirko Rocci; L. Sorba; Stefano Roddaro; V. S. Khrapai

The control and measurement of local non-equilibrium configurations is of utmost importance in applications on energy harvesting, thermoelectrics and heat management in nano-electronics. This challenging task can be achieved with the help of various local probes, prominent examples including superconducting or quantum dot based tunnel junctions, classical and quantum resistors, and Raman thermography. Beyond time-averaged properties, valuable information can also be gained from spontaneous fluctuations of current (noise). From these perspective, however, a fundamental constraint is set by current conservation, which makes noise a characteristic of the whole conductor, rather than some part of it. Here we demonstrate how to remove this obstacle and pick up a local noise temperature of a current biased diffusive conductor with the help of a miniature noise probe. This approach is virtually noninvasive for the electronic energy distributions and extends primary local measurements towards strongly non-equilibrium regimes.

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E. Diez

University of Salamanca

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M. Amado

University of Salamanca

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D. K. Maude

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Fabio Dionigi

Technical University of Berlin

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V. A. Trepakov

University of Osnabrück

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