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    AuthorFratalocchi, Andrea (4)Gongora, J. S. Totero (3)Alrasheed, Salma (1)Bonifazi, Marcella (1)Candeloro, P. (1)View MoreDepartmentComputer, Electrical and Mathematical Sciences and Engineering (CEMSE) Division (4)
    Electrical Engineering Program (4)
    PRIMALIGHT Research Group (4)
    Biological and Environmental Sciences and Engineering (BESE) Division (1)Materials Science and Engineering Program (1)View MoreJournalLaser & Photonics Reviews (1)Light: Science & Applications (1)Physics, Simulation, and Photonic Engineering of Photovoltaic Devices VII (1)Science Advances (1)KAUST Acknowledged Support UnitSupercomputing Laboratory (1)KAUST Grant NumberCRG-1-2012-FRA-005 (2)PublisherAmerican Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) (1)SPIE-Intl Soc Optical Eng (1)Springer Nature (1)Wiley (1)Subject
    plasmonics (4)
    BRCA1 protein (1)energy harvesting (1)Epsilon Near Zero (1)FDTD (1)View MoreTypeArticle (3)Conference Paper (1)Year (Issue Date)2018 (1)2017 (1)2016 (1)2015 (1)Item Availability
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    Detection of single amino acid mutation in human breast cancer by disordered plasmonic self-similar chain

    Coluccio, M. L.; Gentile, F.; Das, Gobind; Nicastri, A.; Perri, A. M.; Candeloro, P.; Perozziello, G.; Proietti Zaccaria, R.; Gongora, J. S. Totero; Alrasheed, Salma; Fratalocchi, Andrea; Limongi, Tania; Cuda, G.; Di Fabrizio, Enzo M. (Science Advances, American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), 2015-09-04) [Article]
    Control of the architecture and electromagnetic behavior of nanostructures offers the possibility of designing and fabricating sensors that, owing to their intrinsic behavior, provide solutions to new problems in various fields. We show detection of peptides in multicomponent mixtures derived from human samples for early diagnosis of breast cancer. The architecture of sensors is based on a matrix array where pixels constitute a plasmonic device showing a strong electric field enhancement localized in an area of a few square nanometers. The method allows detection of single point mutations in peptides composing the BRCA1 protein. The sensitivity demonstrated falls in the picomolar (10−12 M) range. The success of this approach is a result of accurate design and fabrication control. The residual roughness introduced by fabrication was taken into account in optical modeling and was a further contributing factor in plasmon localization, increasing the sensitivity and selectivity of the sensors. This methodology developed for breast cancer detection can be considered a general strategy that is applicable to various pathologies and other chemical analytical cases where complex mixtures have to be resolved in their constitutive components.
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    Energy equipartition and unidirectional emission in a spaser nanolaser

    Gongora, J. S. Totero; Miroshnichenko, Andrey E.; Kivshar, Yuri S.; Fratalocchi, Andrea (Laser & Photonics Reviews, Wiley, 2016-03-18) [Article]
    A spaser is a nanoplasmonic counterpart of a laser, with photons replaced by surface plasmon polaritons and a resonant cavity replaced by a metallic nanostructure supporting localized plasmonic modes. By combining analytical results and first-principle numerical simulations, we provide a comprehensive study of the ultrafast dynamics of a spaser. Due to its highly-nonlinear nature, the spaser is characterized by a large number of interacting degrees of freedom, which sustain a rich manifold of different phases we discover, describe and analyze here. In the regime of strong interaction, the system manifests an irreversible ergodic evolution towards the configuration where energy is equally shared among all the available degrees of freedom. Under this condition, the spaser generates ultrafast vortex-like lasing modes that are spinning on the femtosecond scale and whose direction of rotation is dictated by quantum noise. In this regime, the spaser acquires the character of a nanoparticle with an effective spin. This opens up a range of interesting possibilities for achieving unidirectional emission from a symmetric nanostructure, stimulating a broad range of applications for nanoplasmonic lasers as unidirectional couplers and random information sources.
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    Complex epsilon-near-zero metamaterials for broadband light harvesting systems

    Bonifazi, Marcella; Tian, Yi; Fratalocchi, Andrea (Physics, Simulation, and Photonic Engineering of Photovoltaic Devices VII, SPIE-Intl Soc Optical Eng, 2018-02-17) [Conference Paper]
    We engineered an epsilon-near-zero (ENZ) material from suitably disordered metallic nanostructures. We create a new class of dispersionless composite materials that efficiently harnesses white light. By means of Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM) and Photoluminescence (PLE) measurements we experimentally demonstrate that this nanomaterial increases up to a record value the absorption of ultra-thin light harvesting films at visible and infrared wavelengths. Moreover, we obtained a 170% broadband increase of the external quantum efficiency (EQE) when these ENZ materials are inserted in an energy-harvesting module. We developed an inexpensive electrochemical deposition process that enables large-scale production of this material for energy-harvesting applications.
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    Scalable, ultra-resistant structural colors based on network metamaterials

    Galinski, Henning; Favraud, Gael; Dong, Hao; Gongora, J. S. Totero; Favaro, Grégory; Döbeli, Max; Spolenak, Ralph; Fratalocchi, Andrea; Capasso, Federico (Light: Science & Applications, Springer Nature, 2017-05-05) [Article]
    Structural colors have drawn wide attention for their potential as a future printing technology for various applications, ranging from biomimetic tissues to adaptive camouflage materials. However, an efficient approach to realize robust colors with a scalable fabrication technique is still lacking, hampering the realization of practical applications with this platform. Here, we develop a new approach based on large-scale network metamaterials that combine dealloyed subwavelength structures at the nanoscale with lossless, ultra-thin dielectric coatings. By using theory and experiments, we show how subwavelength dielectric coatings control a mechanism of resonant light coupling with epsilon-near-zero regions generated in the metallic network, generating the formation of saturated structural colors that cover a wide portion of the spectrum. Ellipsometry measurements support the efficient observation of these colors, even at angles of 70°. The network-like architecture of these nanomaterials allows for high mechanical resistance, which is quantified in a series of nano-scratch tests. With such remarkable properties, these metastructures represent a robust design technology for real-world, large-scale commercial applications.
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