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Dive into the research topics where Roberto Cingolani is active.

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Featured researches published by Roberto Cingolani.


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 | 2010

Effects of cell culture media on the dynamic formation of protein-nanoparticle complexes and influence on the cellular response.

Gabriele Maiorano; Stefania Sabella; Barbara Sorce; Virgilio Brunetti; Maria Ada Malvindi; Roberto Cingolani; Pier Paolo Pompa

The development of appropriate in vitro protocols to assess the potential toxicity of the ever expanding range of nanoparticles represents a challenging issue, because of the rapid changes of their intrinsic physicochemical properties (size, shape, reactivity, surface area, etc.) upon dispersion in biological fluids. Dynamic formation of protein coating around nanoparticles is a key molecular event, which may strongly impact the biological response in nanotoxicological tests. In this work, by using citrate-capped gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) of different sizes as a model, we show, by several spectroscopic techniques (dynamic light scattering, UV-visible, plasmon resonance light scattering), that proteins-NP interactions are differently mediated by two widely used cellular media (i.e., Dulbecco Modified Eagles medium (DMEM) and Roswell Park Memorial Institute medium (RPMI), supplemented with fetal bovine serum). We found that, while DMEM elicits the formation of a large time-dependent protein corona, RPMI shows different dynamics with reduced protein coating. Characterization of these nanobioentities was also performed by sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and mass spectroscopy, revealing that the average composition of protein corona does not reflect the relative abundance of serum proteins. To evaluate the biological impact of such hybrid bionanostructures, several comparative viability assays onto two cell lines (HeLa and U937) were carried out in the two media, in the presence of 15 nm AuNPs. We observed that proteins/NP complexes formed in RPMI are more abundantly internalized in cells as compared to DMEM, overall exerting higher cytotoxic effects. These results show that, beyond an in-depth NPs characterization before cellular experiments, a detailed understanding of the effects elicited by cell culture media on NPs is crucial for standardized nanotoxicology tests.


Biomacromolecules | 2010

Cytocompatibility and Uptake of Halloysite Clay Nanotubes

Viviana Vergaro; Elshad Abdullayev; Yuri Lvov; Andre Zeitoun; Roberto Cingolani; R. Rinaldi; Stefano Leporatti

Halloysite is aluminosilicate clay with hollow tubular structure of 50 nm external diameter and 15 nm diameter lumen. Halloysite biocompatibility study is important for its potential applications in polymer composites, bone implants, controlled drug delivery, and for protective coating (e.g., anticorrosion or antimolding). Halloysite nanotubes were added to different cell cultures for toxicity tests. Its fluorescence functionalization by aminopropyltriethosilane (APTES) and with fluorescently labeled polyelectrolyte layers allowed following halloysite uptake by the cells with confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM). Quantitative Trypan blue and MTT measurements performed with two neoplastic cell lines model systems as a function of the nanotubes concentration and incubation time indicate that halloysite exhibits a high level of biocompatibility and very low cytotoxicity, rendering it a good candidate for household materials and medicine. A combination of transmission electron microscopy (TEM), scanning electron microscopy (SEM), and scanning force microscopy (SFM) imaging techniques have been employed to elucidate the structure of halloysite nanotubes.


Nature Materials | 2011

Hierarchical self-assembly of suspended branched colloidal nanocrystals into superlattice structures

Karol Miszta; Joost de Graaf; Giovanni Bertoni; Dirk Dorfs; Rosaria Brescia; Sergio Marras; Luca Ceseracciu; Roberto Cingolani; René van Roij; Marjolein Dijkstra; Liberato Manna

Self-assembly of molecular units into complex and functional superstructures is ubiquitous in biology. The number of superstructures realized by self-assembly of man-made nanoscale units is also growing. However, assemblies of colloidal inorganic nanocrystals are still at an elementary level, not only because of the simplicity of the shape of the nanocrystal building blocks and their interactions, but also because of the poor control over these parameters in the fabrication of more elaborate nanocrystals. Here, we show how monodisperse colloidal octapod-shaped nanocrystals self-assemble, in a suitable solution environment, on two sequential levels. First, linear chains of interlocked octapods are formed, and subsequently the chains spontaneously self-assemble into three-dimensional superstructures. Remarkably, all the instructions for the hierarchical self-assembly are encoded in the octapod shape. The mechanical strength of these superstructures is improved by welding the constituent nanocrystals together.


Langmuir | 2009

Durable Superhydrophobic and Antireflective Surfaces by Trimethylsilanized Silica Nanoparticles-Based Sol−Gel Processing

Michele Manca; Alessandro Cannavale; Luisa De Marco; Antonino S. Aricò; Roberto Cingolani; Giuseppe Gigli

We present a robust and cost-effective coating method to fabricate long-term durable superhydrophobic andsimultaneouslyantireflective surfaces by a double-layer coating comprising trimethylsiloxane (TMS) surface-functionalized silica nanoparticles partially embedded into an organosilica binder matrix produced through a sol-gel process. A dense and homogeneous organosilica gel layer was first coated onto a glass substrate, and then, a trimethylsilanized nanospheres-based superhydrophobic layer was deposited onto it. After thermal curing, the two layers turned into a monolithic film, and the hydrophobic nanoparticles were permanently fixed to the glass substrate. Such treated surfaces showed a tremendous water repellency (contact angle = 168 degrees ) and stable self-cleaning effect during 2000 h of outdoor exposure. Besides this, nanotextured topology generated by the self-assembled nanoparticles-based top layer produced a fair antireflection effect consisting of more than a 3% increase in optical transmittance.


Nano Letters | 2014

An advanced lithium-ion battery based on a graphene anode and a lithium iron phosphate cathode.

Jusef Hassoun; Francesco Bonaccorso; Marco Agostini; Marco Angelucci; Maria Grazia Betti; Roberto Cingolani; Mauro Gemmi; Carlo Mariani; S. Panero; Vittorio Pellegrini; Bruno Scrosati

We report an advanced lithium-ion battery based on a graphene ink anode and a lithium iron phosphate cathode. By carefully balancing the cell composition and suppressing the initial irreversible capacity of the anode in the round of few cycles, we demonstrate an optimal battery performance in terms of specific capacity, that is, 165 mAhg(-1), of an estimated energy density of about 190 Wh kg(-1) and a stable operation for over 80 charge-discharge cycles. The components of the battery are low cost and potentially scalable. To the best of our knowledge, complete, graphene-based, lithium ion batteries having performances comparable with those offered by the present technology are rarely reported; hence, we believe that the results disclosed in this work may open up new opportunities for exploiting graphene in the lithium-ion battery science and development.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

Nonhydrolytic Synthesis of High-Quality Anisotropically Shaped Brookite TiO2 Nanocrystals

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.


Nano Letters | 2010

Assembly of Colloidal Semiconductor Nanorods in Solution by Depletion Attraction

Dmitry Baranov; Angela Fiore; Marijn A. van Huis; Cinzia Giannini; Andrea Falqui; Ugo Lafont; H.W. Zandbergen; Marco Zanella; Roberto Cingolani; Liberato Manna

Arranging anisotropic nanoparticles into ordered assemblies remains a challenging quest requiring innovative and ingenuous approaches. The variety of interactions present in colloidal solutions of nonspherical inorganic nanocrystals can be exploited for this purpose. By tuning depletion attraction forces between hydrophobic colloidal nanorods of semiconductors, dispersed in an organic solvent, these could be assembled into 2D monolayers of close-packed hexagonally ordered arrays directly in solution. Once formed, these layers could be fished onto a substrate, and sheets of vertically standing rods were fabricated, with no additional external bias applied. Alternatively, the assemblies could be isolated and redispersed in polar solvents, yielding suspensions of micrometer-sized sheets which could be chemically treated directly in solution. Depletion attraction forces were also effective in the shape-selective separation of nanorods from binary mixtures of rods and spheres. The reported procedures have the potential to enable powerful and cost-effective fabrication approaches to materials and devices based on self-organized anisotropic nanoparticles.


Langmuir | 2008

Superhydrophobicity Due to the Hierarchical Scale Roughness of PDMS Surfaces

Barbara Cortese; Stefania D'Amone; Michele Manca; Ilenia Viola; Roberto Cingolani; Giuseppe Gigli

Wettability control has been widely investigated in the last decades for technological applications such as microfluidic devices and self-cleaning surfaces by modifying both the chemical composition and the geometric structure of the surfaces. Inspired by the typical morphology of superhydrophobic leaves (such as lotus leaves), we have developed a dual-scale roughness, micro- and nanosized, on polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) surfaces. By combining different geometric parameters and plasma treatment conditions, the structures were controlled hierarchically, at different independent length scales. Both the microsized replicated pillars and the nanosized etched posts tuned the wettability of the PDMS surfaces in a very simple way, up to contact angles of 170 degrees . Furthermore, changes in the influence of micro- and nanoscale geometrical structures were investigated. Hysteresis and contact angles of water droplets are evaluated as a combined effect of micropillars and a superimposed roughness, resulting in high advancing contact angles and low sliding angles.


Nano Letters | 2013

Subnanometer Local Temperature Probing and Remotely Controlled Drug Release Based on Azo-Functionalized Iron Oxide Nanoparticles

Andreas Riedinger; Pablo Guardia; Alberto Curcio; Miguel Angel Garcia; Roberto Cingolani; Liberato Manna; Teresa Pellegrino

Local heating can be produced by iron oxide nanoparticles (IONPs) when exposed to an alternating magnetic field (AMF). To measure the temperature profile at the nanoparticle surface with a subnanometer resolution, here we present a molecular temperature probe based on the thermal decomposition of a thermo-sensitive molecule, namely, azobis[N-(2-carboxyethyl)-2-methylpropionamidine]. Fluoresceineamine (FA) was bound to the azo molecule at the IONP surface functionalized with poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) spacers of different molecular weights. Significant local heating, with a temperature increase up to 45 °C, was found at distances below 0.5 nm from the surface of the nanoparticle, which decays exponentially with increasing distance. Furthermore, the temperature increase was found to scale linearly with the applied field at all distances. We implemented these findings in an AMF-triggered drug release system in which doxorubicin was covalently linked at different distances from the IONP surface bearing the same thermo-labile azo molecule. We demonstrated the AMF triggered distance-dependent release of the drug in a cytotoxicity assay on KB cancer cells.

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Dive into the Roberto Cingolani's collaboration.

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Athanassia Athanassiou

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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Giuseppe Gigli

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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Pier Paolo Pompa

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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Liberato Manna

Delft University of Technology

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Alessandro Massaro

Marche Polytechnic University

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Luana Persano

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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Massimo De Vittorio

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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Elisa Mele

Loughborough University

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Andrea Camposeo

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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