Pantaleo Davide Cozzoli
University of Bari
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Featured researches published by Pantaleo Davide Cozzoli.
Chemical Society Reviews | 2006
Pantaleo Davide Cozzoli; Teresa Pellegrino; Liberato Manna
Current efforts and success of nanoscale science and technology are related to the fabrication of functional materials and devices in which the individual units and their spatial arrangement are engineered down to the nanometer level. One promising way of achieving this goal is by assembling colloidal inorganic nanocrystals as the novel building blocks of matter. This trend has been stimulated by significant advances in the wet-chemical syntheses of robust and easily processable nanocrystals in a wide range of sizes and shapes. The increase in the degree of structural complexity of solution-grown nanostructures appears to be one of the natural directions towards which nanoscience will increasingly orient. Recently, several groups have indeed devised innovative syntheses of nanocrystals through which they have been able to group inorganic materials with different properties in the same particle. These approaches are paving the way to the development of nanosized objects able to perform multiple technological tasks. In this critical review (165 references), we will summarize the recent advances in the synthesis of colloidal nanocrystals, with emphasis on the strategies followed for the fabrication of nano-heterostructures, as well as on their properties and the perspectives in this field.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008
Raffaella Buonsanti; Vincenzo Grillo; Elvio Carlino; Cinzia Giannini; Tobias Kipp; Roberto Cingolani; Pantaleo Davide Cozzoli
A surfactant-assisted nonaqueous strategy, relying on high-temperature aminolysis of titanium carboxylate complexes, has been developed to access anisotropically shaped TiO2 nanocrystals selectively trapped in the metastable brookite phase. Judicious temporal manipulation of precursor supply to the reaction mixture enables systematic tuning of the nanostructure geometric features over an exceptionally wide dimensional range (30-200 nm). Such degree of control is rationalized within the frame of a self-regulated phase-changing seed-catalyzed mechanism, in which homogeneous nucleation, on one side, and heterogeneous nucleation/growth processes, on the other side, are properly balanced while switching from the anatase to the brookite structures, respectively, in a continuous unidirectional crystal development regime. The time variation of the chemical potential for the monomer species in the solution, the size dependence of thermodynamic structural stability of the involved titania polymorphs, and the reduced activation barrier for brookite nucleation onto initially formed anatase seeds play decisive roles in the crystal-phase- and shape-tailored growth of titania nanostructures by the present approach.
Materials Science and Engineering: C | 2003
M. L. Curri; Roberto Comparelli; Pantaleo Davide Cozzoli; G. Mascolo; Angela Agostiano
Abstract In this work, easily processable and highly crystalline ZnO and TiO2 nanoparticles, with a narrow size distribution, obtained by using novel non-hydrolytic synthetic approaches were both tested for the photocatalyzed degradation of an organic dye, methyl red (2-(4-Dimethylamino-phenylazo)-benzoic acid)—C.I. 13020) and their behaviour comparatively examined with respect to TiO2 and ZnO commercial powders. The experiments were carried out using semiconducting oxides under UV and visible light illumination. Preliminary studies on the influence of various experimental factors as pH and dye concentration were performed. The obtained results demonstrated a high photocatalytic efficiency of nanosized semiconducting particles.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008
Albert Figuerola; Angela Fiore; Riccardo Di Corato; Andrea Falqui; Cinzia Giannini; E. Micotti; Alessandro Lascialfari; M. Corti; Roberto Cingolani; Teresa Pellegrino; Pantaleo Davide Cozzoli; Liberato Manna
A one-pot, two-step colloidal strategy to prepare bimagnetic hybrid nanocrystals (HNCs), comprising size-tuned fcc FePt and inverse spinel cubic iron oxide domains epitaxially arranged in a heterodimer configuration, is described. The HNCs have been synthesized in a unique surfactant environment by temperature-driven sequential reactions, involving the homogeneous nucleation of FePt seeds and the subsequent heterogeneous growth of iron oxide. This self-regulated mechanism offers high versatility in the control of the geometric features of the resulting heterostructures, circumventing the use of more elaborate seeded growth techniques. It has been found that, as a consequence of the exchange coupling between the two materials, the HNCs exhibit tunable single-phase-like magnetic behavior, distinct from that of their individual components. In addition, the potential of the heterodimers as effective contrast agents for magnetic resonance imaging techniques has been examined.
Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2006
Stefan Kudera; Cinzia Giannini; Giuseppe Ciccarella; Roberto Cingolani; Pantaleo Davide Cozzoli; Liberato Manna
A strategy to access several types of Au-tipped dumbbell-like nanocrystal heterostructures is presented, which involves the selective oxidation of either PbSe or CdTe sacrificial domains, initially grown on CdSe and CdS nanorods, with a Au(III) ∶ surfactant complex. The formation of gold patches is supported by TEM, XRD and elemental analysis. This approach has allowed us to grow Au domains onto specific locations of anisotropically shaped nanocrystals for which direct metal deposition is unfeasible, as for the case of CdS nanorods. We believe that this strategy may be of general utility to create other types of complex colloidal nanoheterostructures, provided that a suitable sacrificial material can be grown on top of the starting nanocrystal seeds.
ACS Nano | 2010
Despina Fragouli; Raffaella Buonsanti; Giovanni Bertoni; Claudio Sangregorio; Claudia Innocenti; Andrea Falqui; Dante Gatteschi; Pantaleo Davide Cozzoli; Athanassia Athanassiou; Roberto Cingolani
We present a simple technique for magnetic-field-induced formation, assembling, and positioning of magnetic nanowires in a polymer film. Starting from a polymer/iron oxide nanoparticle casted solution that is allowed to dry along with the application of a weak magnetic field, nanocomposite films incorporating aligned nanocrystal-built nanowire arrays are obtained. The control of the dimensions of the nanowires and of their localization across the polymer matrix is achieved by varying the duration of the applied magnetic field, in combination with the evaporation dynamics. These multifunctional anisotropic free-standing nanocomposite films, which demonstrate high magnetic anisotropy, can be used in a wide field of technological applications, ranging from sensors to microfluidics and magnetic devices.
Macromolecular Bioscience | 2009
Riccardo Di Corato; Philomena Piacenza; Mariarosaria Musarò; Raffaella Buonsanti; Pantaleo Davide Cozzoli; Massimo Zambianchi; Giovanna Barbarella; Roberto Cingolani; Liberato Manna; Teresa Pellegrino
Nanostructures displaying fluorescence and magnetic properties at the same time are potentially useful for achieving simultaneous bio-separation and bio-sensing (e.g., magnetic separation coupled with multiplexing optical detection of different tumour cell populations). Spherical nanobeads that display both fluorescent and magnetic features are reported; they are fabricated by grafting fluorescent oligothiophene molecules to an amphiphilic polymer that is then used to enwrap iron oxide nanoparticles, which acts as the magnetic domain. By tuning experimental conditions, control over the number of magnetic nanoparticles per bead and over the bead diameter (30-400 nm) was achieved. A cell separation efficiency of the level required for cell sorting applications is also reported.
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2009
Raffaella Buonsanti; E. Snoeck; Cinzia Giannini; Fabia Gozzo; M. García-Hernández; Miguel Ángel Pérez García; Roberto Cingolani; Pantaleo Davide Cozzoli
A flexible colloidal seeded-growth strategy has been developed to synthesize all-oxide semiconductor/magnetic hybrid nanocrystals (HNCs) in various topological arrangements, for which the dimensions of the constituent material domains can be controlled independently over a wide range. Our approach relies on driving preferential heterogeneous nucleation and growth of spinel cubic iron oxide (IO) domains onto brookite TiO2 nanorods (b-TiO2) with tailored geometric parameters, by means of time-programmed delivery of organometallic precursors into a suitable TiO2-loaded surfactant environment. The b-TiO2 seeds exhibit size-dependent accessibility towards IO under diffusion-controlled growth regime, which allows attainment of HNCs individually made of a single b-TiO2 section functionalized with either one or multiple nearly spherical IO domains. In spite of the dissimilarity of the respective crystal-phases, the two materials share large interfacial junctions without significant lattice strain being induced across the heterostructures. The synthetic achievements have been supported by a systematic morphological, compositional and structural characterization of the as-prepared HNCs, offering a mechanistic insight into the specific role of the seeds in the control of heterostructure formation in liquid media. In addition, the impact of the formed b-TiO2/IO heterojunctions on the magnetic properties of IO has also been assessed.
Nature Nanotechnology | 2010
Liberato De Caro; Elvio Carlino; Gianvito Caputo; Pantaleo Davide Cozzoli; Cinzia Giannini
High-resolution imaging of low-atomic-number chemical elements using electron microscopy is challenging and may require the use of high doses of electrons. Electron diffractive imaging, which creates real-space images using diffraction intensities and phase retrieval methods, could overcome such issues, although it is also subject to limitations. Here, we show that a combination of electron diffractive imaging and high-resolution transmission electron microscopy can image individual TiO(2) nanocrystals with a resolution of 70 pm while exposing the specimen to a low dose of electrons. Our approach, which does not require spherical and chromatic aberration correction, can reveal the location of light atoms (oxygen) in the crystal lattice. We find that the unit cell in nanoscale TiO(2) is subtly different to that in the corresponding bulk.
Advanced Materials | 2013
Ferruccio Pisanello; Godefroy Leménager; Luigi Martiradonna; Stefano Vezzoli; Pascal Desfonds; Pantaleo Davide Cozzoli; Jean-Pierre Hermier; E. Giacobino; Roberto Cingolani; Massimo De Vittorio; A. Bramati
Blinking and single-photon emission can be tailored in CdSe/CdS core/shell colloidal dot-in-rods. By increasing the shell thickness it is possible to obtain almost non-blinking nanocrystals, while the shell length can be used to control single-photon emission probability.