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Dive into the research topics where P. Davide Cozzoli is active.

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Featured researches published by P. Davide Cozzoli.


ACS Nano | 2012

Magnetically Driven Floating Foams for the Removal of Oil Contaminants from Water

Paola Calcagnile; Despina Fragouli; Ilker S. Bayer; George C. Anyfantis; Luigi Martiradonna; P. Davide Cozzoli; Roberto Cingolani; Athanassia Athanassiou

In this study, we present a novel composite material based on commercially available polyurethane foams functionalized with colloidal superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles and submicrometer polytetrafluoroethylene particles, which can efficiently separate oil from water. Untreated foam surfaces are inherently hydrophobic and oleophobic, but they can be rendered water-repellent and oil-absorbing by a solvent-free, electrostatic polytetrafluoroethylene particle deposition technique. It was found that combined functionalization of the polytetrafluoroethylene-treated foam surfaces with colloidal iron oxide nanoparticles significantly increases the speed of oil absorption. Detailed microscopic and wettability studies reveal that the combined effects of the surface morphology and of the chemistry of the functionalized foams greatly affect the oil-absorption dynamics. In particular, nanoparticle capping molecules are found to play a major role in this mechanism. In addition to the water-repellent and oil-absorbing capabilities, the functionalized foams exhibit also magnetic responsivity. Finally, due to their light weight, they float easily on water. Hence, by simply moving them around oil-polluted waters using a magnet, they can absorb the floating oil from the polluted regions, thereby purifying the water underneath. This low-cost process can easily be scaled up to clean large-area oil spills in water.


ACS Nano | 2013

Metallic-like Stoichiometric Copper Sulfide Nanocrystals: Phase- and Shape-Selective Synthesis, Near-Infrared Surface Plasmon Resonance Properties, and Their Modeling

Yi Xie; Concetta Nobile; Vincenzo Grillo; Stefania D’Agostino; Fabio Della Sala; Cinzia Giannini; Davide Altamura; Christian Oelsner; Carola Kryschi; P. Davide Cozzoli

In the realm of semiconductor nanomaterials, a crystal lattice heavily doped with cation/anion vacancies or ionized atomic impurities is considered to be a general prerequisite to accommodating excess free carriers that can support localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR). Here, we demonstrate a surfactant-assisted nonaqueous route to anisotropic copper sulfide nanocrystals, selectively trapped in the covellite phase, which can exhibit intense, size-tunable LSPR at near-infrared wavelengths despite their stoichiometric, undoped structure. Experimental extinction spectra are satisfactorily reproduced by theoretical calculations performed by the discrete dipole approximation method within the framework of the Drude-Sommerfeld model. The LSPR response of the nanocrystals and its geometry dependence are interpreted as arising from the inherent metallic-like character of covellite, allowed by a significant density of lattice-constitutional valence-band free holes. As a consequence of the unique electronic properties of the nanocrystals and of their monodispersity, coherent excitation of symmetric radial breathing modes is observed for the first time in transient absorption experiments at LSPR wavelengths.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Architectural Control of Seeded-Grown Magnetic−Semicondutor Iron Oxide−TiO2 Nanorod Heterostructures: The Role of Seeds in Topology Selection

Raffaella Buonsanti; Vincenzo Grillo; Elvio Carlino; Cinzia Giannini; Fabia Gozzo; M. García-Hernández; Miguel Angel Garcia; Roberto Cingolani; P. Davide Cozzoli

A colloidal nonaqueous approach to semiconductor-magnetic hybrid nanocrystals (HNCs) with selectable heterodimer topologies and tunable geometric parameters is demonstrated. Brookite TiO(2) nanorods, distinguished by a curved shape-tapered profile with richly faceted terminations, are exploited as substrate seeds onto which a single spherical domain of inverse spinel iron oxide can be epitaxially grown at either one apex or any location along their longitudinal sidewalls in a hot surfactant environment. The topologically controlled arrangement of the component material lattices, the crystallographic relationships holding between them, and strain distribution across individual heterostructures have been studied by combining X-ray diffraction and absorption techniques with high-resolution transmission electron microscopy investigations. Supported by such structural knowledge, the synthetic achievements are interpreted within the frame of various mechanistic models offering complementary views of HNC formation. The different HNC architectures are concluded to be almost equivalent in terms of surface-interface energy balance associated with their formation. HNC topology selection is rationalized on the basis of a diffusion-limited mechanism allowing iron oxide heterogeneous nucleation and growth on the TiO(2) nanorods to switch from a thermodynamically controlled to a kinetically overdriven deposition regime, in which the anisotropic reactivity offered by the uniquely structured seeds is accentuated under high spatially inhomogeneous monomer fluxes. Finally, the multifunctional capabilities of the heterostructures are highlighted through illustration of their magnetic and photocatalytic properties, which have been found to diverge from those otherwise exhibited by their individual material components and physical mixture counterparts.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Hyperbranched Anatase TiO2 Nanocrystals: Nonaqueous Synthesis, Growth Mechanism, and Exploitation in Dye-Sensitized Solar Cells

Raffaella Buonsanti; Elvio Carlino; Cinzia Giannini; Davide Altamura; Luisa De Marco; Roberto Giannuzzi; Michele Manca; Giuseppe Gigli; P. Davide Cozzoli

A colloidal crystal-splitting growth regime has been accessed, in which TiO(2) nanocrystals, selectively trapped in the metastable anatase phase, can evolve to anisotropic shapes with tunable hyperbranched topologies over a broad size interval. The synthetic strategy relies on a nonaqueous sol-gel route involving programmed activation of aminolysis and pyrolysis of titanium carboxylate complexes in hot surfactant media via a simple multi-injection reactant delivery technique. Detailed investigations indicate that the branched objects initially formed upon the aminolysis reaction possess a strained monocrystalline skeleton, while their corresponding larger derivatives grown in the subsequent pyrolysis stage accommodate additional arms crystallographically decoupled from the lattice underneath. The complex evolution of the nanoarchitectures is rationalized within the frame of complementary mechanistic arguments. Thermodynamic pathways, determined by the shape-directing effect of the anatase structure and free-energy changes accompanying branching and anisotropic development, are considered to interplay with kinetic processes, related to diffusion-limited, spatially inhomogeneous monomer fluxes, lattice symmetry breaking at transient Ti(5)O(5) domains, and surfactant-induced stabilization. Finally, as a proof of functionality, the fabrication of dye-sensitized solar cells based on thin-film photoelectrodes that incorporate networked branched nanocrystals with intact crystal structure and geometric features is demonstrated. An energy conversion efficiency of 6.2% has been achieved with standard device configuration, which significantly overcomes the best performance ever approached with previously documented prototypes of split TiO(2) nanostructures. Analysis of the relevant photovoltaic parameters reveals that the utilized branched building blocks indeed offer light-harvesting and charge-collecting properties that can overwhelm detrimental electron losses due to recombination and trapping events.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Fluorescent Asymmetrically Cobalt-Tipped CdSe@CdS Core@Shell Nanorod Heterostructures Exhibiting Room-Temperature Ferromagnetic Behavior

Sasanka Deka; Andrea Falqui; Giovanni Bertoni; Claudio Sangregorio; Giordano Poneti; Giovanni Morello; Milena De Giorgi; Cinzia Giannini; Roberto Cingolani; Liberato Manna; P. Davide Cozzoli

A colloidal two-step seeded-growth approach has been devised to selectively synthesize three-component magnetic/semiconductor hybrid nanocrystals (HNCs) with a matchstick-like profile and tunable geometric parameters. The newly developed heterostructures individually comprise a single metallic Co head connected to either apexes of one rod-shaped section made of a CdSe core eccentrically embedded in a CdS shell. The specific topological arrangement realized arises from the peculiar anisotropic reactivity of the noncentrosymmetric CdSe@CdS core@shell nanorods that have been used as substrates to seed heterogeneous nucleation of Co in a surfactant-free environment from an organometallic precursor. The HNCs retain appreciable fluorescent emission in spite of photoexcited charge transfer from the semiconductor to the metal domain and exhibit unusual ferromagnetic-like behavior at room temperature.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2014

Ultrathin TiO2(B) Nanorods with Superior Lithium-Ion Storage Performance

Roberto Giannuzzi; Michele Manca; Luisa De Marco; Maria R. Belviso; Alessandro Cannavale; Teresa Sibillano; Cinzia Giannini; P. Davide Cozzoli; Giuseppe Gigli

The peculiar architecture of a novel class of anisotropic TiO2(B) nanocrystals, which were synthesized by an surfactant-assisted nonaqueous sol-gel route, was profitably exploited to fabricate highly efficient mesoporous electrodes for Li storage. These electrodes are composed of a continuous spongy network of interconnected nanoscale units with a rod-shaped profile that terminates into one or two bulgelike or branch-shaped apexes spanning areas of about 5 × 10 nm(2). This architecture transcribes into a superior cycling performance (a charge capacitance of 222 mAh g(-1) was achieved by a carbon-free TiO2(B)-nanorods-based electrode vs 110 mAh g(-1) exhibited by a comparable TiO2-anatase electrode) and good chemical stability (more than 90% of the initial capacity remains after 100 charging/discharging cycles). Their outstanding lithiation/delithiation capabilities were also exploited to fabricate electrochromic devices that revealed an excellent coloration efficiency (130 cm(2) C(-1) at 800 nm) upon the application of 1.5 V as well as an extremely fast electrochromic switching (coloration time ∼5 s).


Nano Letters | 2009

Exchange-coupled bimagnetic cobalt/iron oxide branched nanocrystal heterostructures.

Marianna Casavola; Andrea Falqui; Miguel Angel Garcia; M. García-Hernández; Cinzia Giannini; Roberto Cingolani; P. Davide Cozzoli

A colloidal seeded-growth strategy, relying on time-programmed delivery of selected stabilizing surfactants, has been developed to synthesize bimagnetic hybrid nanocrystals (HNCs) that consist of a single-crystal tetrapod-shaped skeleton of ferrimagnetic (FiM) iron oxide functionalized with multiple polycrystalline spherical domains of ferromagnetic (FM) Co. Due to the direct bonding interfaces formed between the two materials at the relevant junction regions, the HNCs exhibit FiM-FM exchange coupling, which transcribes into a rich scenario of significantly modified properties (not otherwise achievable with any of the single components or with their physical mixtures), including higher saturation magnetization and coercitivity values, exchange biasing, and enhanced thermal stability due to induced extra anisotropy. The availability of these new types of HNCs suggests that development of appropriate synthetic tools for arranging distinct material domains in predetermined spatial arrangements could lead to a more rational design of nanoheterostructures potentially exploitable as active elements in future generations of magnetic recording devices.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2014

Spatially controlled surface energy traps on superhydrophobic surfaces.

Athanasios Milionis; Despina Fragouli; Luigi Martiradonna; George C. Anyfantis; P. Davide Cozzoli; Ilker S. Bayer; Athanassia Athanassiou

Water wetting and adhesion control on polymeric patterns are achieved by tuning the configuration of their surfaces structural characteristics from single to dual and triple length-scale. In particular, surfaces with combined micro-, submicrometer-,and nanoroughness are developed, using photolithographically structured SU-8 micro-pillars as substrates for the consecutive spray deposition of polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) submicrometer particles and hydrophobically capped iron oxide colloidal nanoparticles. The PTFE particles alone or in combination with the nanoparticles render the SU-8 micropillars superhydrophobic. The water adhesion behaviour of the sprayed pillars is more complex since they can be tuned gradually from totally adhesive to completely non adhesive. The influence of the hierarchical geometrical features of the functionalized surfaces on this behaviour is discussed within the frame of the theory. Specially designed surfaces using the described technique are presented for selective drop deposition and evaporation. This simple method for liquid adhesion control on superhydrophobic surfaces can find various applications in the field of microfluidics, sensors, biotechnology, antifouling materials, etc.


ACS Nano | 2013

Spin-Polarization Transfer in Colloidal Magnetic-Plasmonic Au/Iron Oxide Hetero-nanocrystals

Francesco Pineider; César de Julián Fernández; Valeria Videtta; Elvio Carlino; Awni al Hourani; F. Wilhelm; A. Rogalev; P. Davide Cozzoli; Paolo Ghigna; Claudio Sangregorio

We report on the unprecedented direct observation of spin-polarization transfer across colloidal magneto-plasmonic Au@Fe-oxide core@shell nanocrystal heterostructures. A magnetic moment is induced into the Au domain when the magnetic shell contains a reduced Fe-oxide phase in direct contact with the noble metal. An increased hole density in the Au states suggested occurrence of a charge-transfer process concomitant to the magnetization transfer. The angular to spin magnetic moment ratio, m(orb)/m(spin), for the Au 5d states, which was found to be equal to 0.38, appeared to be unusually large when compared to previous findings. A mechanism relying on direct hybridization between the Au and Fe states at the core/shell interface is proposed to account for the observed transfer of the magnetic moment.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Size, Shape, and Internal Atomic Ordering of Nanocrystals by Atomic Pair Distribution Functions: A Comparative Study of γ-Fe2O3 Nanosized Spheres and Tetrapods

Valeri Petkov; P. Davide Cozzoli; Raffaella Buonsanti; Roberto Cingolani; Yang Ren

Due to their limited length of structural coherence nanocrystalline materials show very diffuse powder X-ray diffraction patterns that are difficult to interpret unambiguously. We demonstrate that a combination of high-energy X-ray powder diffraction and atomic pair distribution function analysis can be used to both assess the geometry (i.e., size and shape) and determine the internal atomic ordering of nanocrystalline materials in a straightforward way. As an example we consider cubic gamma-Fe(2)O(3) nanosized crystals shaped as spheres and tetrapods.

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Cinzia Giannini

National Research Council

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Giuseppe Gigli

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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Roberto Cingolani

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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Michele Manca

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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Roberto Giannuzzi

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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Aurora Rizzo

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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