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Dive into the research topics where Maria F. Pantano is active.

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Featured researches published by Maria F. Pantano.


ACS Nano | 2016

Ultrasensitive Characterization of Mechanical Oscillations and Plasmon Energy Shift in Gold Nanorods

Giancarlo Soavi; Iacopo Tempra; Maria F. Pantano; Andrea Cattoni; Stéphane Collin; Paolo Biagioni; Nicola Pugno; Giulio Cerullo

Mechanical vibrational resonances in metal nanoparticles are intensively studied because they provide insight into nanoscale elasticity and for their potential application to ultrasensitive mass detection. In this paper, we use broadband femtosecond pump-probe spectroscopy to study the longitudinal acoustic phonons of arrays of gold nanorods with different aspect ratios, fabricated by electron beam lithography with very high size uniformity. We follow in real time the impulsively excited extensional oscillations of the nanorods by measuring the transient shift of the localized surface plasmon band. Broadband and high-sensitivity detection of the time-dependent extinction spectra enables one to develop a model that quantitatively describes the periodic variation of the plasmon extinction coefficient starting from the steady-state spectrum with only one additional free parameter. This model allows us to retrieve the time-dependent elongation of the nanorods with an ultrahigh sensitivity and to measure oscillation amplitudes of just a few picometers and plasmon energy shifts on the order of 10(-2) meV.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Tightening slip knots in raw and degummed silk to increase toughness without losing strength.

Maria F. Pantano; Alice Berardo; Nicola Pugno

Knots are fascinating topological elements, which can be found in both natural and artificial systems. While in most of the cases, knots cannot be loosened without breaking the strand where they are tightened, herein, attention is focused on slip or running knots, which on the contrary can be unfastened without compromising the structural integrity of their hosting material. Two different topologies are considered, involving opposite unfastening mechanisms, and their influence on the mechanical properties of natural fibers, as silkworm silk raw and degummed single fibers, is investigated and quantified. Slip knots with optimized shape and size result in a significant enhancement of fibers energy dissipation capability, up to 300–400%, without affecting their load bearing capacity.


Interface Focus | 2016

Slip knots and unfastening topologies enhance toughness without reducing strength of silk fibroin fibres

Alice Berardo; Maria F. Pantano; Nicola Pugno

The combination of high strength and high toughness is a desirable feature that structural materials should display. However, while in the past, engineers had to compromise on either strength or toughness depending on the requested application, nowadays, new toughening strategies are available to provide strong materials with high toughness. In this paper, we focus on one of such strategy, which requires no chemical treatment, but the implementation of slip knots with optimized shape and size in the involved material, which is silkworm silk in this case. In particular, a variety of slip knot topologies with different unfastening mechanisms are investigated, including even complex knots usually used in the textile industry, and their efficiency in enhancing toughness of silk fibres is discussed.


Nature Communications | 2018

Protein disorder–order interplay to guide the growth of hierarchical mineralized structures

Sherif Elsharkawy; Maisoon Al-Jawad; Maria F. Pantano; Esther Tejeda-Montes; Khushbu Mehta; Hasan Jamal; Shweta Agarwal; Kseniya Shuturminska; Alistair Rice; Nadezda V. Tarakina; Rory M. Wilson; A. J. Bushby; Matilde Alonso; José Carlos Rodríguez-Cabello; Ettore Barbieri; Armando del Río Hernández; Molly M. Stevens; Nicola Pugno; P. Anderson; Alvaro Mata

A major goal in materials science is to develop bioinspired functional materials based on the precise control of molecular building blocks across length scales. Here we report a protein-mediated mineralization process that takes advantage of disorder–order interplay using elastin-like recombinamers to program organic–inorganic interactions into hierarchically ordered mineralized structures. The materials comprise elongated apatite nanocrystals that are aligned and organized into microscopic prisms, which grow together into spherulite-like structures hundreds of micrometers in diameter that come together to fill macroscopic areas. The structures can be grown over large uneven surfaces and native tissues as acid-resistant membranes or coatings with tuneable hierarchy, stiffness, and hardness. Our study represents a potential strategy for complex materials design that may open opportunities for hard tissue repair and provide insights into the role of molecular disorder in human physiology and pathology.There is evidence that disordered proteins play a role in the mineralization process. Here, the authors report on the development of elastin-like recombinant protein membranes using disordered-ordered interplay to investigate and guide mineralization.


Nanotechnology | 2018

A mechanical system for tensile testing of supported films at the nanoscale

Maria F. Pantano; G. Speranza; C. Galiotis; Nicola Pugno

Standard tensile tests of materials are usually performed on freestanding specimens. However, such requirement is difficult to implement when the materials of interest are of nanoscopic dimensions due to problems related to their handling and manipulation. In the present paper, a new device is presented for tensile testing of thin nanomaterials, which allows tests to be carried out on specimens initially deposited onto a macroscopic pre-notched substrate. On loading, however, no substrate effects are introduced, allowing the films to be freely stretched. The results obtained from a variety of thin metal or polymeric films are very promising for the further development of this technique as a standard method for nanomaterial mechanical testing.


Physical Review E | 2017

Micromechanical model for protein materials: from macromolecules to macroscopic fibers

G. Puglisi; D. De Tommasi; Maria F. Pantano; Nicola Pugno; Giuseppe Saccomandi

We propose a model for the mechanical behavior of protein materials. Based on a limited number of experimental macromolecular parameters (persistence and contour length) we obtain the macroscopic behavior of keratin fibers (human, cow, and rabbit hair), taking into account the damage and residual stretches effects that are fundamental in many functions of life. We also show the capability of our approach to describe the main dissipation and permanent strain effects observed in the more complex spider silk fibers. The comparison between our results and the data obtained experimentally from cyclic tests demonstrates that our model is robust and is able to reproduce with a remarkable accuracy the experimental behavior of all protein materials we tested.


Polymer | 2015

High-performance electrospun co-polyimide nanofibers

Jian Yao; Maria F. Pantano; Nicola Pugno; Cwm Cees Bastiaansen; Ton Peijs


Journal of Supercritical Fluids | 2016

Dry acellular oesophageal matrix prepared by supercritical carbon dioxide

Alessandro Zambon; Massimo Vetralla; Luca Urbani; Maria F. Pantano; Giovanna Ferrentino; Michela Pozzobon; Nicola Pugno; Paolo De Coppi; Nicola Elvassore; Sara Spilimbergo


Composites Science and Technology | 2018

Grafting carbon nanotubes onto carbon fibres doubles their effective strength and the toughness of the composite

Luca Lavagna; Daniele Massella; Maria F. Pantano; Federico Bosia; Nicola Pugno; Matteo Pavese


Journal of The European Ceramic Society | 2014

Design of a bent beam electrothermal actuator for in situ tensile testing of ceramic nanostructures

Maria F. Pantano; Nicola Pugno

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Luca Urbani

University College London

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Paolo De Coppi

University College London

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G. Puglisi

Instituto Politécnico Nacional

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