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Dive into the research topics where Valentin A. Milichko is active.

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Featured researches published by Valentin A. Milichko.


Nano Letters | 2015

Tuning of Magnetic Optical Response in a Dielectric Nanoparticle by Ultrafast Photoexcitation of Dense Electron-Hole Plasma.

S. V. Makarov; S. I. Kudryashov; Ivan Mukhin; A M Mozharov; Valentin A. Milichko; Alexander E. Krasnok; Pavel A. Belov

We propose a novel approach for efficient tuning of optical properties of a high refractive index subwavelength nanoparticle with a magnetic Mie-type resonance by means of femtosecond laser irradiation. This concept is based on ultrafast photoinjection of dense (>10(20) cm(-3)) electron-hole plasma within such nanoparticle, drastically changing its transient dielectric permittivity. This allows manipulation by both electric and magnetic nanoparticle responses, resulting in dramatic changes of its scattering diagram and scattering cross section. We experimentally demonstrate 20% tuning of reflectance of a single silicon nanoparticle by femtosecond laser pulses with wavelength in the vicinity of the magnetic dipole resonance. Such a single-particle nanodevice enables designing of fast and ultracompact optical switchers and modulators.


Chemical Society Reviews | 2016

Metal–organic frameworks as competitive materials for non-linear optics

Leila R. Mingabudinova; Vladimir V. Vinogradov; Valentin A. Milichko; Evamarie Hey-Hawkins; Alexandr V. Vinogradov

The last five years have witnessed a huge breakthrough in the creation and the study of the properties of a new class of compounds - metamaterials. The next stage of this technological revolution will be the development of active, controllable, and non-linear metamaterials, surpassing natural media as platforms for optical data processing and quantum information applications. However, scientists are constantly faced with the need to find new methods that can ensure the formation of quantum and non-linear metamaterials with higher resolution. One such method of producing metamaterials in the future, which will provide scalability and availability, is chemical synthesis. Meanwhile, the chemical synthesis of organized 3D structures with a period of a few nanometers and a size of up to a few millimeters is not an easy task and is yet to be resolved. The most promising avenue seems to be the use of highly porous structures based on metal-organic frameworks that have demonstrated their unique properties in the field of non-linear optics (NLO) over the past three years. Thus, the aim of this review is to examine current progress and the possibilities of using metal-organic frameworks in the field of non-linear optics as chemically obtained metamaterials of the future. The review begins by presenting the theoretical principles of physical phenomena represented by mathematical descriptions for clarity. Major attention is paid to the second harmonic generation (SHG) effect. In this section we compare inorganic single crystals, which are most commonly used to study the effect in question, to organic materials, which also possess the required properties. Based on these data, we present a rationale for the possibility of studying the non-linear optical properties of metal-organic structures as well as describing the use of synthetic approaches and the difficulties associated with them. The second part of the review explicitly acquaints the reader with a new class of materials which successfully combines the positive properties of organic and inorganic materials. Using recently synthesized metal-organic frameworks and coordination polymers in the field of non-linear optics as an example, we consider synthetic approaches used for obtaining materials with desired properties and the factors to be considered in this case. Finally, probable trends towards improving the quality of the synthesized materials with regards to their further use in the field of non-linear optical effects are described.


Advanced Materials | 2016

Fabrication of Hybrid Nanostructures via Nanoscale Laser-Induced Reshaping for Advanced Light Manipulation

Dmitry A. Zuev; S. V. Makarov; Ivan Mukhin; Valentin A. Milichko; S.V. Starikov; I.A. Morozov; Ivan Shishkin; Alexander E. Krasnok; Pavel A. Belov

Ordered hybrid nanostructures for nanophotonics applications are fabricated by a novel approach via femtosecond laser melting of asymmetric metal-dielectric (Au/Si) nanoparticles created by lithographical methods. The approach allows selective reshaping of the metal components of the hybrid nanoparticles without affecting the dielectric ones and is applied for tuning of the scattering properties of the hybrid nanostructures in the visible range.


Advanced Materials | 2017

van der Waals metal-organic framework as an excitonic material for advanced photonics

Valentin A. Milichko; S. V. Makarov; Alexey V. Yulin; Alexandr V. Vinogradov; Andrei A. Krasilin; Elena V. Ushakova; Vladimir P. Dzyuba; Evamarie Hey-Hawkins; Evgeny A. Pidko; Pavel A. Belov

Synergistic combination of organic and inorganic nature in van der Waals metal-organic frameworks supports different types of robust excitons that can be effectively and independently manipulated by light at room temperature, and opens new concepts for all-optical data processing and storage.


ACS Nano | 2016

Inkjet Color Printing by Interference Nanostructures.

Aleksandr V. Yakovlev; Valentin A. Milichko; Vladimir V. Vinogradov; Alexandr V. Vinogradov

Color printing technology is developing rapidly; in less than 40 years, it moved from dot matrix printers with an ink-soaked cloth ribbon to 3D printers used to make three-dimensional color objects. Nevertheless, what remained unchanged over this time is the fact that in each case, dye inks (CMYK or RGB color schemes) were exclusively used for coloring, which inevitably limits the technological possibilities and color reproduction. As a next step in printing color images and storing information, we propose the technology of producing optical nanostructures. In this paper, we report use of inkjet technology to create colored interference layers with high accuracy without the need for high-temperature fixing. This was made possible due to using titania-based colloidal ink yielding monolithic coatings with a high refractive index (2.00 ± 0.08 over the entire visible range) when naturally dried. By controlling the film thickness by using inkjet deposition, we produced images based on controlled interference and implementing color printing with one ink. The lack of dyes in the proposed method has good environmental prospects, because applied systems based on a crystalline anatase sol are nontoxic and biologically inert. The paper explains in detail the principle of producing interference images by the classical inkjet method and shows the advantages of this technique in depositing coatings with uniform thickness, which are required for large-scale interference color imaging even on unprepared polymer films. This article demonstrates the possibility of inkjet printing of nanostructures with a precision in thickness of up to 50 nm, we believe that the proposed approach will be the groundwork for developing interference color printing approach and allow to implement new methods of forming optical nano-objects by widely available techniques.


Nano Letters | 2017

Efficient Second-Harmonic Generation in Nanocrystalline Silicon Nanoparticles

S. V. Makarov; Mihail I. Petrov; Urs Zywietz; Valentin A. Milichko; Dmitry A. Zuev; Natalia Lopanitsyna; Alexey Yu. Kuksin; Ivan Mukhin; G. P. Zograf; E. V. Ubyivovk; Daria A. Smirnova; Sergey Starikov; Boris N. Chichkov; Yuri S. Kivshar

Recent trends to employ high-index dielectric particles in nanophotonics are motivated by their reduced dissipative losses and large resonant enhancement of nonlinear effects at the nanoscale. Because silicon is a centrosymmetric material, the studies of nonlinear optical properties of silicon nanoparticles have been targeting primarily the third-harmonic generation effects. Here we demonstrate, both experimentally and theoretically, that resonantly excited nanocrystalline silicon nanoparticles fabricated by an optimized laser printing technique can exhibit strong second-harmonic generation (SHG) effects. We attribute an unexpectedly high yield of the nonlinear conversion to a nanocrystalline structure of nanoparticles supporting the Mie resonances. The demonstrated efficient SHG at green light from a single silicon nanoparticle is 2 orders of magnitude higher than that from unstructured silicon films. This efficiency is significantly higher than that of many plasmonic nanostructures and small silicon nanoparticles in the visible range, and it can be useful for a design of nonlinear nanoantennas and silicon-based integrated light sources.


Nano Letters | 2017

Resonant Nonplasmonic Nanoparticles for Efficient Temperature-Feedback Optical Heating

G. P. Zograf; Mihail I. Petrov; Dmitry A. Zuev; Pavel A. Dmitriev; Valentin A. Milichko; S. V. Makarov; Pavel A. Belov

We propose a novel photothermal approach based on resonant dielectric nanoparticles, which possess imaginary part of permittivity significantly smaller as compared to metal ones. We show both experimentally and theoretically that a spherical silicon nanoparticle with a magnetic quadrupolar Mie resonance converts light to heat up to 4 times more effectively than similar spherical gold nanoparticle at the same heating conditions. We observe photoinduced temperature raise up to 900 K with the silicon nanoparticle on a glass substrate at moderate intensities (<2 mW/μm2) and typical laser wavelength (633 nm). The advantage of using crystalline silicon is the simplicity of local temperature control by means of Raman spectroscopy working in a broad range of temperatures, that is, up to the melting point of silicon (1690 K) with submicrometer spatial resolution. Our CMOS-compatible heater-thermometer nanoplatform paves the way to novel nonplasmonic photothermal applications, extending the temperature range and simplifying the thermoimaging procedure.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Ion-beam assisted laser fabrication of sensing plasmonic nanostructures

Aleksandr Kuchmizhak; Stanislav O. Gurbatov; Oleg B. Vitrik; Yuri N. Kulchin; Valentin A. Milichko; S. V. Makarov; S. I. Kudryashov

Simple high-performance, two-stage hybrid technique was developed for fabrication of different plasmonic nanostructures, including nanorods, nanorings, as well as more complex structures on glass substrates. In this technique, a thin noble-metal film on a dielectric substrate is irradiated by a single tightly focused nanosecond laser pulse and then the modified region is slowly polished by an accelerated argon ion (Ar+) beam. As a result, each nanosecond laser pulse locally modifies the initial metal film through initiation of fast melting and subsequent hydrodynamic processes, while the following Ar+-ion polishing removes the rest of the film, revealing the hidden topography features and fabricating separate plasmonic structures on the glass substrate. We demonstrate that the shape and lateral size of the resulting functional plasmonic nanostructures depend on the laser pulse energy and metal film thickness, while subsequent Ar+-ion polishing enables to vary height of the resulting nanostructures. Plasmonic properties of the fabricated nanostructures were characterized by dark-field micro-spectroscopy, Raman and photoluminescence measurements performed on single nanofeatures, as well as by supporting numerical calculations of the related electromagnetic near-fields and Purcell factors. The developed simple two-stage technique represents a new step towards direct large-scale laser-induced fabrication of highly ordered arrays of complex plasmonic nanostructures.


Journal of Nanophotonics | 2011

Nontypical photoinduced optical nonlinearity of dielectric nanostructures

Vladimir P. Dzyuba; Valentin A. Milichko; Yurii N. Kulchin

The recently discovered ultralow-threshold nonlinear refraction of low-intensity laser radiation in dielectric nanostructures has an atypical dependence on radiation intensity in the pulsedandcontinuousmodes.Wefirstcarryoutquantitativemeasurementsofthedependenceof the nonlinear response of liquid dielectric nanostructures on the low-intensity radiation and then devise a theoretical explanation. The theory suggests that the nonlinearity is of photoinduced nature instead of a thermal one and depends directly on the nanoparticles electronic structure and the relationship between permittivities of dielectric matrix and nanoparticles. C � 2011 Society


Advanced Materials Research | 2013

Quantum-Size States of a Particle inside the Deformed Nanosphere

Vladimir P. Dzyuba; Yurii N. Kulchin; Valentin A. Milichko

In this paper we propose an original functional method which allows us to determine the effect of different deviations of nano-object shape on quantum characteristics of particles localized inside the nano-object. This method is ideologically similar to the perturbation theory, but the perturbation of the surface shape, rather than potential, is used. The results of analysis the quantum-size states of particles inside the nano-object with deformed sphere shape showed that the probability density of particle location is more sensitive to shape perturbations than surface energy spectrum and quantum states density are.

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S. V. Makarov

Lebedev Physical Institute

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Pavel A. Belov

Queen Mary University of London

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Ivan Mukhin

Saint Petersburg Academic University

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Alexander E. Krasnok

University of Texas at Austin

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Mihail I. Petrov

University of Eastern Finland

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Elena V. Ushakova

Saint Petersburg State University

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A. K. Samusev

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Filipp E. Komissarenko

Saint Petersburg Academic University

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