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Dive into the research topics where Giulio Guzzinati is active.

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Featured researches published by Giulio Guzzinati.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Exploiting lens aberrations to create electron-vortex beams.

L. Clark; Armand Béché; Giulio Guzzinati; Axel Lubk; Michael Mazilu; R. Van Boxem; Jo Verbeeck

A model for a new electron-vortex beam production method is proposed and experimentally demonstrated. The technique calls on the controlled manipulation of the degrees of freedom of the lens aberrations to achieve a helical phase front. These degrees of freedom are accessible by using the corrector lenses of a transmission electron microscope. The vortex beam is produced through a particular alignment of these lenses into a specifically designed astigmatic state and applying an annular aperture in the condenser plane. Experimental results are found to be in good agreement with simulations.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Observation of the Larmor and Gouy Rotations with Electron Vortex Beams

Giulio Guzzinati; P. Schattschneider; Konstantin Y. Bliokh; Franco Nori; Jo Verbeeck

Electron vortex beams carrying intrinsic orbital angular momentum (OAM) are produced in electron microscopes where they are controlled and focused by using magnetic lenses. We observe various rotational phenomena arising from the interaction between the OAM and magnetic lenses. First, the Zeeman coupling, proportional to the OAM and magnetic field strength, produces an OAM-independent Larmor rotation of a mode superposition inside the lens. Second, when passing through the focal plane, the electron beam acquires an additional Gouy phase dependent on the absolute value of the OAM. This brings about the Gouy rotation of the superposition image proportional to the sign of the OAM. A combination of the Larmor and Gouy effects can result in the addition (or subtraction) of rotations, depending on the OAM sign. This behavior is unique to electron vortex beams and has no optical counterpart, as Larmor rotation occurs only for charged particles. Our experimental results are in agreement with recent theoretical predictions.


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2014

Plasmon Mapping in Au@Ag Nanocube Assemblies

Bart Goris; Giulio Guzzinati; Cristina Fernández-López; Jorge Pérez-Juste; Luis M. Liz-Marzán; Andreas Trügler; Ulrich Hohenester; Jo Verbeeck; Sara Bals; Gustaaf Van Tendeloo

Surface plasmon modes in metallic nanostructures largely determine their optoelectronic properties. Such plasmon modes can be manipulated by changing the morphology of the nanoparticles or by bringing plasmonic nanoparticle building blocks close to each other within organized assemblies. We report the EELS mapping of such plasmon modes in pure Ag nanocubes, Au@Ag core–shell nanocubes, and arrays of Au@Ag nanocubes. We show that these arrays enable the creation of interesting plasmonic structures starting from elementary building blocks. Special attention will be dedicated to the plasmon modes in a triangular array formed by three nanocubes. Because of hybridization, a combination of such nanotriangles is shown to provide an antenna effect, resulting in strong electrical field enhancement at the narrow gap between the nanotriangles.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Transport of intensity phase retrieval of arbitrary wave fields including vortices.

Axel Lubk; Giulio Guzzinati; Felix Börrnert; Jo Verbeeck

The phase problem can be considered as one of the cornerstones of quantum mechanics intimately connected to the detection process and the uncertainty relation. The latter impose fundamental limits on the manifold phase reconstruction schemes invented to date, in particular, at small magnitudes of the quantum wave. Here, we show that a rigorous solution of the transport of intensity reconstruction (TIE) scheme in terms of a linear elliptic partial differential equation for the phase provides reconstructions even in the presence of wave zeros if particular boundary conditions are given. We furthermore discuss how partial coherence hampers phase reconstruction and show that a modified version of the TIE reconstructs the curl-free current density at arbitrary (in)coherence. Our results open the way for TIE-based phase retrieval of arbitrary wave fields, eventually containing zeros such as phase vortices.


Physical Review A | 2013

Topological analysis of paraxially scattered electron vortex beams

Axel Lubk; L. Clark; Giulio Guzzinati; Jo Verbeeck

We investigate topological aspects of sub-nm electron vortex beams upon elastic propagation through atomic scattering potentials. Two main aspects can be distinguished: (i) Significantly reduced delocalization compared to a similar non-vortex beam if the beam centers on an atomic column and (ii) site symmetry dependent splitting of higher-order vortex beams. Furthermore, the results provide insight into the complex vortex line fabric within the elastically scattered wave containing characteristic vortex loops predominantly attached to atomic columns and characteristic twists of vortex lines around atomic columns.


Comptes Rendus Physique | 2014

Shaping electron beams for the generation of innovative measurements in the (S)TEM

Jo Verbeeck; Giulio Guzzinati; L. Clark; Roeland Juchtmans; Ruben Van Boxem; He Tian; Armand Béché; Axel Lubk; Gustaaf Van Tendeloo

Abstract In TEM, a typical goal consists of making a small electron probe in the sample plane in order to obtain high spatial resolution in scanning transmission electron microscopy. In order to do so, the phase of the electron wave is corrected to resemble a spherical wave compensating for aberrations in the magnetic lenses. In this contribution, we discuss the advantage of changing the phase of an electron wave in a specific way in order to obtain fundamentally different electron probes opening up new applications in the (S)TEM. We focus on electron vortex states as a specific family of waves with an azimuthal phase signature and discuss their properties, production and applications. The concepts presented here are rather general and also different classes of probes can be obtained in a similar fashion, showing that electron probes can be tuned to optimize a specific measurement or interaction.


Physical Review A | 2014

Measuring the Orbital Angular Momentum of Electron Beams

Giulio Guzzinati; L. Clark; Armand Béché; Jo Verbeeck

EMAT, University of Antwerp, Groenenborgerlaan 171, 2020 Antwerp, Belgium(Dated: January 29, 2014)The recent demonstration of electron vortex beams has opened up the new possibility of studyingorbital angular momentum (OAM) in the interaction between electron beams and matter. To thisaim, methods to analyze the OAM of an electron beam are fundamentally important and a necessarynext step. We demonstrate the measurement of electron beam OAM through a variety of techniques.The use of forked holographic masks, diffraction from geometric apertures, diffraction from a knife-edge and the application of an astigmatic lens are all experimentally demonstrated. The viabilityand limitations of each are discussed with supporting numerical simulations.


Physical Review A | 2014

Quantitative measurement of orbital angular momentum in electron microscopy

L. Clark; Armand Béché; Giulio Guzzinati; Jo Verbeeck

Electron vortex beams have been predicted to enable atomic scale magnetic information measurement, via transfer of orbital angular momentum. Research so far has focused on developing production techniques and applications of these beams. However, methods to measure the outgoing orbital angular momentum distribution are also a crucial requirement towards this goal. Here, we use a method to obtain the orbital angular momentum decomposition of an electron beam, using a multipinhole interferometer. We demonstrate both its ability to accurately measure orbital angular momentum distribution, and its experimental limitations when used in a transmission electron microscope.


Ultramicroscopy | 2015

Prospects for versatile phase manipulation in the TEM: Beyond aberration correction

Giulio Guzzinati; L. Clark; Armand Béché; Roeland Juchtmans; Ruben Van Boxem; Michael Mazilu; Jo Verbeeck

In this paper we explore the desirability of a transmission electron microscope in which the phase of the electron wave can be freely controlled. We discuss different existing methods to manipulate the phase of the electron wave and their limitations. We show how with the help of current techniques the electron wave can already be crafted into specific classes of waves each having their own peculiar properties. Assuming a versatile phase modulation device is feasible, we explore possible benefits and methods that could come into existence borrowing from light optics where the so-called spatial light modulators provide programmable phase plates for quite some time now. We demonstrate that a fully controllable phase plate building on Harald Rose׳s legacy in aberration correction and electron optics in general would open an exciting field of research and applications.


Physical Review A | 2016

Symmetry-constrained electron vortex propagation

L. Clark; Giulio Guzzinati; Armand Béché; Axel Lubk; Jo Verbeeck

Electron vortex beams hold great promise for development in transmission electron microscopy, but have yet to be widely adopted. This is partly due to the complex set of interactions that occur between a beam carrying orbital angular momentum (OAM) and a sample. Herein, the system is simplified to focus on the interaction between geometrical symmetries, OAM and topology. We present multiple simulations, alongside experimental data to study the behaviour of a variety of electron vortex beams after interacting with apertures of different symmetries, and investigate the effect on their OAM and vortex structure, both in the far-field and under free-space propagation.

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L. Clark

University of Antwerp

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Axel Lubk

Dresden University of Technology

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Sara Bals

University of Antwerp

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Jerome Martin

Institut d'Astrophysique de Paris

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