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Dive into the research topics where Sotirios Christodoulou is active.

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Featured researches published by Sotirios Christodoulou.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2014

Continuous-wave biexciton lasing at room temperature using solution-processed quantum wells

Joel Q. Grim; Sotirios Christodoulou; Roman Krahne; Roberto Cingolani; Liberato Manna; Iwan Moreels

Solution-processed inorganic and organic materials have been pursued for more than a decade as low-threshold, high-gain lasing media, motivated in large part by their tunable optoelectronic properties and ease of synthesis and processing. Although both have demonstrated stimulated emission and lasing, they have not yet approached the continuous-wave pumping regime. Two-dimensional CdSe colloidal nanosheets combine the advantage of solution synthesis with the optoelectronic properties of epitaxial two-dimensional quantum wells. Here, we show that these colloidal quantum wells possess large exciton and biexciton binding energies of 132 meV and 30 meV, respectively, giving rise to stimulated emission from biexcitons at room temperature. Under femtosecond pulsed excitation, close-packed thin films yield an ultralow stimulated emission threshold of 6 μJ cm(-2), sufficient to achieve continuous-wave pumped stimulated emission, and lasing when these layers are embedded in surface-emitting microcavities.


ACS Nano | 2012

Influence of Chloride Ions on the Synthesis of Colloidal Branched CdSe/CdS Nanocrystals by Seeded Growth

Mee Rahn Kim; Karol Miszta; Mauro Povia; Rosaria Brescia; Sotirios Christodoulou; Mirko Prato; Sergio Marras; Liberato Manna

We studied the influence of chloride ions (Cl(-)), introduced as CdCl(2), on the seeded growth synthesis of colloidal branched CdSe(core)/CdS(pods) nanocrystals. This is carried out by growing wurtzite CdS pods on top of preformed octahedral sphalerite CdSe seeds. When no CdCl(2) is added, the synthesis of multipods has a low reproducibility, and the side nucleation of CdS nanorods is often observed. At a suitable concentration of CdCl(2), octapods are formed and they are stable in solution during the synthesis. Our experiments indicate that Cl(-) ions introduced in the reaction reduce the availability of Cd(2+) ions in solution, most likely via formation of strong complexes with both Cd and the various surfactants. This prevents homogeneous nucleation of CdS nanocrystals, so that the heterogeneous nucleation of CdS pods on top of the CdSe seeds is the preferred process. Once such optimal concentration of CdCl(2) is set for a stable growth of octapods, the pod lengths can be tuned by varying the relative ratios of the various alkyl phosphonic acids used. Furthermore, at higher concentrations of CdCl(2) added, octapods are initially formed, but many of them evolve into tetrapods over time. This transformation points to an additional role of Cl species in regulating the growth rate and stability of various crystal facets of the CdS pods.


Physical Review B | 2015

Giant exciton oscillator strength and radiatively limited dephasing in two-dimensional platelets

Ali Naeem; Francesco Masia; Sotirios Christodoulou; Iwan Moreels; Paola Borri; Wolfgang Werner Langbein

We measured the intrinsic ground-state exciton dephasing and population dynamics in colloidal quasi two-dimensional (2D) CdSe nanoplatelets at low temperature (5-50K) using transient resonant four-wave mixing in heterodyne detection. Our results indicate that below 20K the exciton dephasing is lifetime limited, with the exciton population lifetime being as fast as 1 ps. This is consistent with an exciton lifetime given by a fast radiative decay due to the large in-plane coherence area of the exciton center-of-mass motion in these quasi 2D systems compared to spherical nanocrystals.


Nature Communications | 2015

Band structure engineering via piezoelectric fields in strained anisotropic CdSe/CdS nanocrystals

Sotirios Christodoulou; F. Rajadell; Alberto Casu; Gianfranco Vaccaro; Joel Q. Grim; Alessandro Genovese; Liberato Manna; Juan I. Climente; Francesco Meinardi; Gabriele Rainò; Thilo Stöferle; Rainer F. Mahrt; J. Planelles; Sergio Brovelli; Iwan Moreels

Strain in colloidal heteronanocrystals with non-centrosymmetric lattices presents a unique opportunity for controlling optoelectronic properties and adds a new degree of freedom to existing wavefunction engineering and doping paradigms. We synthesized wurtzite CdSe nanorods embedded in a thick CdS shell, hereby exploiting the large lattice mismatch between the two domains to generate a compressive strain of the CdSe core and a strong piezoelectric potential along its c-axis. Efficient charge separation results in an indirect ground-state transition with a lifetime of several microseconds, almost one order of magnitude longer than any other CdSe/CdS nanocrystal. Higher excited states recombine radiatively in the nanosecond time range, due to increasingly overlapping excited-state orbitals. k̇p calculations confirm the importance of the anisotropic shape and crystal structure in the buildup of the piezoelectric potential. Strain engineering thus presents an efficient approach to highly tunable single- and multiexciton interactions, driven by a dedicated core/shell nanocrystal design.


Journal of Biophotonics | 2014

A new filtering technique for removing anti-Stokes emission background in gated CW-STED microscopy.

Iván Coto Hernández; Chiara Peres; Francesca Cella Zanacchi; Marta d'Amora; Sotirios Christodoulou; Paolo Bianchini; Alberto Diaspro; Giuseppe Vicidomini

Stimulated emission depletion (STED) microscopy is a prominent approach of super-resolution optical microscopy, which allows cellular imaging with so far unprecedented unlimited spatial resolution. The introduction of time-gated detection in STED microscopy significantly reduces the (instantaneous) intensity required to obtain sub-diffraction spatial resolution. If the time-gating is combined with a STED beam operating in continuous wave (CW), a cheap and low labour demand implementation is obtained, the so called gated CW-STED microscope. However, time-gating also reduces the fluorescence signal which forms the image. Thereby, background sources such as fluorescence emission excited by the STED laser (anti-Stokes fluorescence) can reduce the effective resolution of the system. We propose a straightforward method for subtraction of anti-Stokes background. The method hinges on the uncorrelated nature of the anti-Stokes emission background with respect to the wanted fluorescence signal. The specific importance of the method towards the combination of two-photon-excitation with gated CW-STED microscopy is demonstrated.


Nature Communications | 2015

Reversed oxygen sensing using colloidal quantum wells towards highly emissive photoresponsive varnishes

Monica Lorenzon; Sotirios Christodoulou; Gianfranco Vaccaro; Jacopo Pedrini; Francesco Meinardi; Iwan Moreels; Sergio Brovelli

Colloidal quantum wells combine the advantages of size-tunable electronic properties with vast reactive surfaces that could allow one to realize highly emissive luminescent-sensing varnishes capable of detecting chemical agents through their reversible emission response, with great potential impact on life sciences, environmental monitoring, defence and aerospace engineering. Here we combine spectroelectrochemical measurements and spectroscopic studies in a controlled atmosphere to demonstrate the ‘reversed oxygen-sensing’ capability of CdSe colloidal quantum wells, that is, the exposure to oxygen reversibly increases their luminescence efficiency. Spectroelectrochemical experiments allow us to directly relate the sensing response to the occupancy of surface states. Magneto-optical measurements demonstrate that, under vacuum, heterostructured CdSe/CdS colloidal quantum wells stabilize in their negative trion state. The high starting emission efficiency provides a possible means to enhance the oxygen sensitivity by partially de-passivating the particle surfaces, thereby enhancing the density of unsaturated sites with a minimal cost in term of luminescence losses.


Physical Review Letters | 2016

p-State luminescence in CdSe nanoplatelets : role of lateral confinement and a longitudinal optical phonon bottleneck

Alexander W. Achtstein; Riccardo Scott; Sebastian Kickhöfel; Stefan T. Jagsch; Sotirios Christodoulou; Guillaume H. V. Bertrand; Anatol Prudnikau; Artsiom Antanovich; Mikhail Artemyev; Iwan Moreels; Andrei Schliwa; Ulrike Woggon

We evidence excited state emission from p states well below ground state saturation in CdSe nanoplatelets. Size-dependent exciton ground and excited state energies and population dynamics are determined by four independent methods: time-resolved PL, time-integrated PL, rate equation modeling, and Hartree renormalized k·p calculations-all in very good agreement. The ground state-excited state energy spacing strongly increases with the lateral platelet quantization. Depending on its detuning to the LO phonon energy, the PL decay of CdSe platelets is governed by a size tunable LO phonon bottleneck, related to the low exciton-phonon coupling, very large oscillator strength, and energy spacing of both states. This is, for instance, ideal to tune lasing properties. CdSe platelets are perfectly suited to control the exciton-phonon interaction by changing their lateral size while the optical transition energy is determined by their thickness.


Nano Letters | 2016

Strong Exciton-Photon Coupling with Colloidal Nanoplatelets in an Open Microcavity.

Lucas C. Flatten; Sotirios Christodoulou; Robin K. Patel; Alexander Buccheri; David M. Coles; Benjamin P. L. Reid; Robert A. Taylor; Iwan Moreels; Jason M. Smith

Colloidal semiconductor nanoplatelets exhibit quantum size effects due to their thickness of only a few monolayers, together with strong optical band-edge transitions facilitated by large lateral extensions. In this article, we demonstrate room temperature strong coupling of the light and heavy hole exciton transitions of CdSe nanoplatelets with the photonic modes of an open planar microcavity. Vacuum Rabi splittings of 66 ± 1 meV and 58 ± 1 meV are observed for the heavy and light hole excitons, respectively, together with a polariton-mediated hybridization of both transitions. By measuring the concentration of platelets in the film, we compute the transition dipole moment of a nanoplatelet exciton to be μ = (575 ± 110) D. The large oscillator strength and fluorescence quantum yield of semiconductor nanoplatelets provide a perspective toward novel photonic devices by combining polaritonic and spinoptronic effects.


Chemical Communications | 2016

Shape control of zincblende CdSe nanoplatelets

Guillaume H. V. Bertrand; Anatolii Polovitsyn; Sotirios Christodoulou; Ali Hossain Khan; Iwan Moreels

The lateral dimensions of CdSe nanoplatelets have a strong and unique influence on their opto-electronic properties, with sizes that can be tuned from the weak to the strong exciton confinement regime. There are state-of-the-art reports on several nanoplatelet syntheses; however, at present only the thickness is well-controlled. We demonstrate here that we can achieve a control over the aspect ratio and overall nanoplate area by carefully adjusting the reagents that induce the in-plane growth. A variation of the fraction of hydrated Cd(OAc)2 in a Cd(OAc)2/Cd(OAc)2·2H2O mixture tailors the nanoplatelet aspect ratio. This occurs independently of the reaction time, which can be used to fine-tune the overall length and width. An interpretation is given by the in situ formation of a small amount of hydroxide anions that alter the surface energy of specific planes.


Light-Science & Applications | 2017

Rapid and robust control of single quantum dots

Nicolò Accanto; Pablo M. de Roque; Marcial Galvan-Sosa; Sotirios Christodoulou; Iwan Moreels; Niek F. van Hulst

The combination of single particle detection and ultrafast laser pulses is an instrumental method to track dynamics at the femtosecond time scale in single molecules, quantum dots and plasmonic nanoparticles. Optimal control of the extremely short-lived coherences of these individual systems has so far remained elusive, yet its successful implementation would enable arbitrary external manipulation of otherwise inaccessible nanoscale dynamics. In ensemble measurements, such control is often achieved by resorting to a closed-loop optimization strategy, where the spectral phase of a broadband laser field is iteratively optimized. This scheme needs long measurement times and strong signals to converge to the optimal solution. This requirement is in conflict with the nature of single emitters whose signals are weak and unstable. Here we demonstrate an effective closed-loop optimization strategy capable of addressing single quantum dots at room temperature, using as feedback observable the two-photon photoluminescence induced by a phase-controlled broadband femtosecond laser. Crucial to the optimization loop is the use of a deterministic and robust-against-noise search algorithm converging to the theoretically predicted solution in a reduced amount of steps, even when operating at the few-photon level. Full optimization of the single dot luminescence is obtained within ~100 trials, with a typical integration time of 100 ms per trial. These times are faster than the typical photobleaching times in single molecules at room temperature. Our results show the suitability of the novel approach to perform closed-loop optimizations on single molecules, thus extending the available experimental toolbox to the active control of nanoscale coherences.

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Iwan Moreels

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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Joel Q. Grim

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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Liberato Manna

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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Liberato Manna

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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