Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Patrizia Borghetti is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Patrizia Borghetti.


Analyst | 2013

Enhancing the sensitivity of chemiresistor gas sensors based on pristine carbon nanotubes to detect low-ppb ammonia concentrations in the environment

Federica Rigoni; Silvia Tognolini; Patrizia Borghetti; Giovanni Drera; S. Pagliara; A. Goldoni; L. Sangaletti

The possibility of using novel architectures based on carbon nanotubes (CNTs) for a realistic monitoring of the air quality in an urban environment requires the capability to monitor concentrations of polluting gases in the low-ppb range. This limit has been so far virtually neglected, as most of the testing of new ammonia gas sensor devices based on CNTs is carried out above the ppm limit. In this paper, we present single-wall carbon nanotube (SWCNT) chemiresistor gas sensors operating at room temperature, displaying an enhanced sensitivity to NH3. Ammonia concentrations in air as low as 20 ppb have been measured, and a detection limit of 3 ppb is demonstrated, which is in the full range of the average NH3 concentration in an urban environment and well below the sensitivities so far reported for pristine, non-functionalized SWCNTs operating at room temperature. In addition to careful preparation of the SWCNT layers, through sonication and dielectrophoresis that improved the quality of the CNT bundle layers, the low-ppb limit is also attained by revealing and properly tracking a fast dynamics channel in the desorption process of the polluting gas molecules.


ACS Nano | 2013

Understanding energy-level alignment in donor-acceptor/metal interfaces from core-level shifts

Afaf El-Sayed; Patrizia Borghetti; E. Goiri; Celia Rogero; Luca Floreano; Giacomo Lovat; Duncan J. Mowbray; Jose Luis Cabellos; Yutaka Wakayama; Angel Rubio; J. E. Ortega; Dimas G. de Oteyza

The molecule/metal interface is the key element in charge injection devices. It can be generally defined by a monolayer-thick blend of donor and/or acceptor molecules in contact with a metal surface. Energy barriers for electron and hole injection are determined by the offset from HOMO (highest occupied) and LUMO (lowest unoccupied) molecular levels of this contact layer with respect to the Fermi level of the metal electrode. However, the HOMO and LUMO alignment is not easy to elucidate in complex multicomponent, molecule/metal systems. We demonstrate that core-level photoemission from donor-acceptor/metal interfaces can be used to straightforwardly and transparently assess molecular-level alignment. Systematic experiments in a variety of systems show characteristic binding energy shifts in core levels as a function of molecular donor/acceptor ratio, irrespective of the molecule or the metal. Such shifts reveal how the level alignment at the molecule/metal interface varies as a function of the donor-acceptor stoichiometry in the contact blend.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2011

Supramolecular Engineering through Temperature-Induced Chemical Modification of 2H-Tetraphenylporphyrin on Ag(111): Flat Phenyl Conformation and Possible Dehydrogenation Reactions

Giovanni Di Santo; Stephan Blankenburg; Carla Castellarin-Cudia; Mattia Fanetti; Patrizia Borghetti; L. Sangaletti; Luca Floreano; Alberto Verdini; Elena Magnano; Federica Bondino; Carlo A. Pignedoli; Manh-Thuong Nguyen; Roberto Gaspari; Daniele Passerone; A. Goldoni

Scratching the surface: Formation of a monolayer of 2H-tetraphenylporphyrins (2H-TPP) on Ag(111), either by sublimation of a multilayer in the range 525-600 K or by annealing (at the same temperature) a monolayer deposited at room temperature, induces a chemical modification of the molecules. Rotation of the phenyl rings into a flat conformation is observed and tentatively explained, by using DFT calculations, as a peculiar reaction due to molecular dehydrogenation.


Applied Physics Letters | 2011

Spectroscopic evidence of in-gap states at the SrTiO3/LaAlO3 ultrathin interfaces

Giovanni Drera; Francesco Banfi; F. Federici Canova; Patrizia Borghetti; L. Sangaletti; Federica Bondino; Elena Magnano; J Huijben; Mark Huijben; Guus Rijnders; D. H. A. Blank; H. Hilgenkamp; Alexander Brinkman

Experimental evidence of differences in the electronic properties of an insulating and a conducting SrTiO3/LaAlO3 interface is provided by soft x-ray spectroscopies. While core level photoemission measurements show that only at the conducting interface Ti ions with 3+ ionization state are present, by using resonant photoemission and x-ray absorption spectroscopies, it is shown that in both samples in-gap states with a Ti 3d character are present, but their density is higher at the conducting interface.


ACS Nano | 2014

Spectroscopic Fingerprints of Work-Function-Controlled Phthalocyanine Charging on Metal Surfaces

Patrizia Borghetti; Afaf El-Sayed; E. Goiri; Celia Rogero; Jorge Lobo-Checa; Luca Floreano; J. E. Ortega; Dimas G. de Oteyza

The electronic character of a π-conjugated molecular overlayer on a metal surface can change from semiconducting to metallic, depending on how molecular orbitals arrange with respect to the electrodes Fermi level. Molecular level alignment is thus a key property that strongly influences the performance of organic-based devices. In this work, we report how the electronic level alignment of copper phthalocyanines on metal surfaces can be tailored by controlling the substrate work function. We even show the way to finely tune it for one fixed phthalocyanine-metal combination without the need to intercalate substrate-functionalizing buffer layers. Instead, the work function is trimmed by appropriate design of the phthalocyanines supramolecular environment, such that charge transfer into empty molecular levels can be triggered across the metal-organic interface. These intriguing observations are the outcome of a powerful combination of surface-sensitive electron spectroscopies, which further reveal a number of characteristic spectroscopic fingerprints of a lifted LUMO degeneracy associated with the partial phthalocyanine charging.


Journal of Environmental Monitoring | 2012

Development of low-cost ammonia gas sensors and data analysis algorithms to implement a monitoring grid of urban environmental pollutants

Maria Chiesa; Federica Rigoni; Maria Paderno; Patrizia Borghetti; Giovanna Gagliotti; Maurizio Bertoni; Antonio Angelo Ballarin Denti; Lorenzo Schiavina; A. Goldoni; L. Sangaletti

The present study is focused on the implementation of a novel, low cost, urban grid of nanostructured chemresistor gas sensors for ammonia concentration ([NH(3)]) monitoring, with NH(3) being one of the main precursors of secondary fine particulate. Low-cost chemresistor gas sensors based on carbon nanotubes have been developed, their response to [NH(3)] in the 0.17-5.0 ppm range has been tested, and the devices have been properly calibrated under different relative humidity conditions in the 33-63% range. In order to improve the chemresistor selectivity towards [NH(3)], an Expert System, based on fuzzy logic and genetic algorithms, has been developed to extract the atmospheric [NH(3)] (with a sensitivity of a few ppb) from the output signal of a model chemresistor gas sensor exposed to an NO(2), NO(X) and O(3) gas mixture. The concentration of these pollutants that are known to be the most significant interfering compounds during ammonia detection with carbon nanotube gas sensors has been tracked by the ARPA monitoring network in the city of Milan and the historical dataset collected over one year has been used to train the Expert System.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2013

Adsorption geometry, conformation, and electronic structure of 2H-octaethylporphyrin on Ag(111) and Fe metalation in ultra high vacuum

Patrizia Borghetti; Giovanni Di Santo; Carla Castellarin-Cudia; Mattia Fanetti; L. Sangaletti; Elena Magnano; Federica Bondino; A. Goldoni

Due to the growing interest in the ferromagnetic properties of Fe-octaethylporphyrins (Fe-OEP) for applications in spintronics, methods to produce stable Fe-porphyrins with no Cl atoms are highly demanded. Here, we demonstrate the formation of Fe-OEP layers on Ag(111) single crystal by the ultra high vacuum in situ metalation of the free-base 2H-2,3,7,8,12,13,17,18-octaethylporphyrin (2H-OEP) molecules. The metalation proceeds exactly as in the case of 2H-5,10,15,20-tetraphenylporphyrin (2H-TPP) on the same substrate. An extensive surface characterization by means of X-ray photoemission spectroscopy, valence band photoemission, and NEXAFS with synchrotron radiation light provides information on molecular conformation and electronic structure in the monolayer and multilayer cases. We demonstrate that the presence of the ethyl groups affects the tilt of the adsorbed molecules, the conformation of the macrocycle, and the polarization screening in multilayers, but has only a minor effect in the metalation process with respect to 2H-TPP.


Langmuir | 2010

Effects of Potassium on the Supramolecular Structure and Electronic Properties of Eumelanin Thin Films

Patrizia Borghetti; A. Goldoni; Carla Castellarin-Cudia; Loredana Casalis; Fabian Herberg; Luca Floreano; Albano Cossaro; Alberto Verdini; Ralph Gebauer; Prasenjit Ghosh; L. Sangaletti

The role of potassium in the formation of synthetic eumelanin aggregates is investigated by atomic force microscopy and soft-X-ray spectroscopy. Control over the thin film granularity is achieved by using K salts, in both drop casting and electrodeposition of eumelanin thin films. Further control over orientation is made possible by a suitable choice of the substrate: evidence of self-assembly is found for thin films deposited on gold. Finally, it is shown that the potassium content affects not only the samples morphology, but also the low-lying states in the valence band, where a transfer of spectral weight across the HOMO-LUMO gap is observed, disclosing possible applications of this multifunctional biomacromolecule.


ChemPhysChem | 2010

Substrate Influence for the Zn‐tetraphenyl‐porphyrin Adsorption Geometry and the Interface‐Induced Electron Transfer

Carla Castellarin-Cudia; Patrizia Borghetti; Giovanni Di Santo; Mattia Fanetti; Rosanna Larciprete; Cinzia Cepek; Paolo Vilmercati; L. Sangaletti; Alberto Verdini; Albano Cossaro; Luca Floreano; A. Morgante; A. Goldoni

In molecular devices, the importance of interfaces cannot be neglected as they determine charge injection and charge flow and, therefore, the device performance. Herein we report on the interaction of one single layer of Zn-tetraphenyl-porphyrin with Ag(110) and Si(111). Photoemission, near-edge X-ray absorption, and resonant photoemission are used to study the bonding nature, the adsorption geometry as well as the dynamics of electron transfer between the molecules and the metal or semiconductor surfaces. Molecule-substrate charge transfer is driven by the overlap with the molecular pi orbitals. In particular, the coupling of the phenyl legs with the substrate and the relative excited charge injection are dramatically different for the two surfaces considered.


AIP Advances | 2011

Electro-chemical deposition of zinc oxide nanostructures by using two electrodes

B. A. Taleatu; A.Y. Fasasi; G. Di Santo; S. Bernstorff; A. Goldoni; Mattia Fanetti; Luca Floreano; Patrizia Borghetti; Loredana Casalis; B. Sanavio; Carla Castellarin-Cudia

One of the most viable ways to grow nanostructures is electro deposition. However, most electrodeposited samples are obtained by three-electrode electrochemical cell. We successfully use a much simpler two-electrode cell to grow different ZnO nanostructures from common chemical reagents. Concentration, pH of the electrolytes and growth parameters like potentials at the electrodes, are tailored to allow fast growth without complexity. Morphology and surface roughness are investigated by Scanning Electron and Air Force Microscopy (SEM and AFM) respectively, crystal structure by X-Ray Diffraction measurements (XRD) and ZnO stoichiometry by core level photoemission spectroscopy (XPS).

Collaboration


Dive into the Patrizia Borghetti's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

A. Goldoni

Elettra Sincrotrone Trieste

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

L. Sangaletti

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mattia Fanetti

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Giovanni Di Santo

Elettra Sincrotrone Trieste

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Giovanni Drera

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge