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Dive into the research topics where Iacopo Torre is active.

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Featured researches published by Iacopo Torre.


Science | 2016

Negative local resistance caused by viscous electron backflow in graphene

Denis A. Bandurin; Iacopo Torre; R. Krishna Kumar; M. Ben Shalom; Andrea Tomadin; A. Principi; Gregory Auton; Ekaterina Khestanova; K. S. Novoselov; I. V. Grigorieva; L. A. Ponomarenko; A. K. Geim; Marco Polini

Electrons that flow like a fluid Electrons inside a conductor are often described as flowing in response to an electric field. This flow rarely resembles anything like the familiar flow of water through a pipe, but three groups describe counterexamples (see the Perspective by Zaanen). Moll et al. found that the viscosity of the electron fluid in thin wires of PdCoO2 had a major effect on the flow, much like what happens in regular fluids. Bandurin et al. found evidence in graphene of electron whirlpools similar to those formed by viscous fluid flowing through a small opening. Finally, Crossno et al. observed a huge increase of thermal transport in graphene, a signature of so-called Dirac fluids. Science, this issue p. 1061, 1055, 1058; see also p. 1026 Proximity transport measurements find evidence of whirlpools of graphene’s viscous electronic fluid. [Also see Perspective by Zaanen] Graphene hosts a unique electron system in which electron-phonon scattering is extremely weak but electron-electron collisions are sufficiently frequent to provide local equilibrium above the temperature of liquid nitrogen. Under these conditions, electrons can behave as a viscous liquid and exhibit hydrodynamic phenomena similar to classical liquids. Here we report strong evidence for this transport regime. We found that doped graphene exhibits an anomalous (negative) voltage drop near current-injection contacts, which is attributed to the formation of submicrometer-size whirlpools in the electron flow. The viscosity of graphene’s electron liquid is found to be ~0.1 square meters per second, an order of magnitude higher than that of honey, in agreement with many-body theory. Our work demonstrates the possibility of studying electron hydrodynamics using high-quality graphene.


Physical Review B | 2015

Nonlocal transport and the hydrodynamic shear viscosity in graphene

Iacopo Torre; Andrea Tomadin; A. K. Geim; Marco Polini

Motivated by recent experimental progress in preparing encapsulated graphene sheets with ultrahigh mobilities up to room temperature, we present a theoretical study of dc transport in doped graphene in the hydrodynamic regime. By using the continuity and Navier-Stokes equations, we demonstrate analytically that measurements of nonlocal resistances in multiterminal Hall bar devices can be used to extract the hydrodynamic shear viscosity of the two-dimensional (2D) electron liquid in graphene. We also discuss how to probe the viscosity-dominated hydrodynamic transport regime by scanning probe potentiometry and magnetometry. Our approach enables measurements of the viscosity of any 2D electron liquid in the hydrodynamic transport regime.


Physical Review B | 2016

Electron hydrodynamics dilemma: Whirlpools or no whirlpools

Francesco M. D. Pellegrino; Iacopo Torre; A. K. Geim; Marco Polini

In highly viscous electron systems such as, for example, high quality graphene above liquid nitrogen temperature, a linear response to applied electric current becomes essentially nonlocal, which can give rise to a number of new and counterintuitive phenomena including negative nonlocal resistance and current whirlpools. It has also been shown that, although both effects originate from high electron viscosity, a negative voltage drop does not principally require current backflow. In this work, we study the role of geometry on viscous flow and show that confinement effects and relative positions of injector and collector contacts play a pivotal role in the occurrence of whirlpools. Certain geometries may exhibit backflow at arbitrarily small values of the electron viscosity, whereas others require a specific threshold value for whirlpools to emerge.


Physical Review B | 2017

Nonlocal transport and the Hall viscosity of two-dimensional hydrodynamic electron liquids

Francesco M. D. Pellegrino; Iacopo Torre; Marco Polini

In a fluid subject to a magnetic field the viscous stress tensor has a dissipationless antisymmetric component controlled by the so-called Hall viscosity. We here propose an all-electrical scheme that allows a determination of the Hall viscosity of a two-dimensional electron liquid in a solid-state device.


Nature Photonics | 2017

Electrical 2π phase control of infrared light in a 350-nm footprint using graphene plasmons

Achim Woessner; Yuanda Gao; Iacopo Torre; Mark B. Lundeberg; Cheng Tan; Kenji Watanabe; Takashi Taniguchi; Rainer Hillenbrand; James Hone; Marco Polini

Phase velocity of graphene plasmons is electrically controlled in a set-up enabling tuning of the phase between 0 and 2π.


Nano Letters | 2018

Nonlinear light mixing by graphene plasmons

Dmytro Kundys; Ben Van Duppen; Owen P. Marshall; Francisco Rodríguez; Iacopo Torre; Andrea Tomadin; Marco Polini; A. N. Grigorenko

Graphene is known to possess strong optical nonlinearity which turned out to be suitable for creation of efficient saturable absorbers in mode locked fiber lasers. Nonlinear response of graphene can be further enhanced by the presence of graphene plasmons. Here, we report a novel nonlinear effect observed in nanostructured graphene which comes about due to excitation of graphene plasmons. We experimentally detect and theoretically explain enhanced mixing of near-infrared and mid-infrared light in arrays of graphene nanoribbons. Strong compression of light by graphene plasmons implies that the described effect of light mixing is nonlocal in nature and orders of magnitude larger than the conventional local graphene nonlinearity. Both second and third order nonlinear effects were observed in our experiments with the recalculated third-order nonlinearity coefficient reaching values of 4.5 × 10-6 esu. The suggested effect could be used in variety of applications including nonlinear light modulators, light multiplexers, light logic, and sensing devices.


Physical Review B | 2017

Lippmann-schwinger theory for two-dimensional plasmon scattering

Iacopo Torre; M. I. Katsnelson; Alberto Diaspro; Vittorio Pellegrini; Marco Polini

Long-lived and ultraconfined plasmons in two-dimensional (2D) electron systems may provide a subwavelength diagnostic tool to investigate localized dielectric, electromagnetic, and pseudo-electromagnetic perturbations. In this article, we present a general theoretical framework to study the scattering of 2D plasmons against such perturbations in the nonretarded limit. We discuss both parabolic-band and massless Dirac fermion 2D electron systems. Our theory starts from a Lippmann-Schwinger equation for the screened potential in an inhomogeneous 2D electron system and utilizes as inputs analytical long-wavelength expressions for the density-density response function, going beyond the local approximation. We present illustrative results for the scattering of 2D plasmons against a pointlike charged impurity and a one-dimensional electrostatic barrier due to a line of charges. Exact numerical results obtained from the solution of the Lippmann-Schwinger equation are compared with approximate results based on the Born and eikonal approximations. The importance of nonlocal effects is finally emphasized.


Physical Review B | 2015

Electrical plasmon detection in graphene waveguides

Iacopo Torre; Andrea Tomadin; Roman Krahne; Vittorio Pellegrini; Marco Polini

We present a simple device architecture that allows all-electrical detection of plasmons in a graphene waveguide. The key principle of our electrical plasmon detection scheme is the nonlinear nature of the hydrodynamic equations of motion that describe transport in graphene at room temperature and in a wide range of carrier densities. These nonlinearities yield a dc voltage in response to the oscillating field of a propagating plasmon. For illustrative purposes, we calculate the dc voltage arising from the propagation of the lowest-energy modes in a fully analytical fashion. Our device architecture for all-electrical plasmon detection paves the way for the integration of graphene plasmonic waveguides in electronic circuits.


Archive | 2018

All-Electrical Scheme for Hall Viscosity Measurement

F. M. D. Pellegrino; Iacopo Torre; Marco Polini

In highly viscous electron systems such as, for example, high quality graphene above liquid nitrogen temperature, a linear response to applied electric current becomes essentially nonlocal, which can give rise to a number of new and counterintuitive phenomena including negative nonlocal resistance and current whirlpools [1]. Moreover, in a fluid subject to a magnetic field the viscous stress tensor has a dissipationless antisymmetric component controlled by the so-called Hall viscosity. We propose an all-electrical scheme that allows a determination of the Hall viscosity of a two-dimensional electron liquid in a solid-state device.


arXiv: Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics | 2018

Measuring Hall Viscosity of Graphene's Electron Fluid

Alexey Berdyugin; Songyan Xu; Francesco M. D. Pellegrino; R. Krishna Kumar; A. Principi; Iacopo Torre; M. Ben Shalom; T. Taniguchi; Kenji Watanabe; I. V. Grigorieva; Marco Polini; A. K. Geim; Denis A. Bandurin

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Marco Polini

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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Andrea Tomadin

Austrian Academy of Sciences

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A. K. Geim

University of Manchester

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Francesco M. D. Pellegrino

Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa

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Vittorio Pellegrini

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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Roman Krahne

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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M. Ben Shalom

University of Manchester

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