Publications by authors named "Marco A C Potenza"

We propose a compact, portable, and low-cost holographic microscope designed for the characterization of micrometric particles suspended in a liquid. This system is built around a commercial optical microscope by substituting its illumination source (a light-emitting diode) with a collimated laser beam. Similarly, a quartz flow cell replaces the microscope glass slide using a 3D-printed custom mount.

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Knowledge of the refractive index of water in the deeply supercooled metastable liquid state is important, for example, for an accurate description of optical reflection and refraction processes occurring in clouds. However, a measurement of both the temperature and wavelength dependence of the refractive index under such extreme conditions is challenging. Here, we employ Raman spectroscopy in combination with microscopic water jets in vacuum to obtain the refractive index of supercooled water to a lowest temperature of 230.

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The future of halide perovskites (HaPs) is beclouded by limited understanding of their long-term stability. While HaPs can be altered by radiation that induces multiple processes, they can also return to their original state by "self-healing." Here two-photon (2P) absorption is used to effect light-induced modifications within MAPbI single crystals.

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We describe a light scattering technique for characterizing colloidal samples under constant flow. It exploits the properties of speckles in the deep Fresnel region-the so-called near field speckles-providing absolute scattering measurements of the static form factor of the sample, as described extensively by Mazzoni et al. [Rev.

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Traffic-related emissions include gas and particles that can alter air quality and affect human and environmental health. Limited studies have demonstrated that particulate debris thrown off from brakes are toxic to higher plants. The acute phytotoxicity of brake pad wear debris (BPWD) investigated using cress seeds grown in soil contaminated with increasing concentrations of debris.

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The fast evaporative cooling of micrometer-sized water droplets in a vacuum offers the appealing possibility to investigate supercooled water-below the melting point but still a liquid-at temperatures far beyond the state of the art. However, it is challenging to obtain a reliable value of the droplet temperature under such extreme experimental conditions. Here, the observation of morphology-dependent resonances in the Raman scattering from a train of perfectly uniform water droplets allows us to measure the variation in droplet size resulting from evaporative mass losses with an absolute precision of better than 0.

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Self-healing, where a modification in some parameter is reversed with time without any external intervention, is one of the particularly interesting properties of halide perovskites. While there are a number of studies showing such self-healing in perovskites, they all are carried out on thin films, where the interface between the perovskite and another phase (including the ambient) is often a dominating and interfering factor in the process. Here, self-healing in perovskite (methylammonium, formamidinium, and cesium lead bromide (MAPbBr , FAPbBr , and CsPbBr )) single crystals is reported, using two-photon microscopy to create damage (photobleaching) ≈110 µm inside the crystals and to monitor the recovery of photoluminescence after the damage.

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We report the fabrication and characterization of a simple and compact hyperspectral imaging setup based on a stretchable diffraction grating made with a metal-polymer nanocomposite. The nanocomposite is produced by implanting Ag clusters in a poly(dimethylsiloxane) film by supersonic cluster beam implantation. The deformable grating has curved grooves and is imposed on a concave cylindrical surface, thus obtaining optical power in two orthogonal directions.

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Here we report the quantitative in situ characterization of size distribution evolution of polymeric nanoparticles incubated in murine serum, filtered and unfiltered murine blood. We used an analytical optical approach, named Single Particle Extinction and Scattering (SPES), which relies on the measurements of two independent parameters of single particles. SPES is based on a robust self-reference interference optical scheme which allows a rejection of the spurious signals coming from the background caused by the medium.

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Article Synopsis
  • Protein-dense liquid clusters are areas with high protein concentrations in solutions, typically ranging from tens to hundreds of nanometers in size.
  • These clusters act as precursors for protein crystal nucleation, supporting the two-step nucleation mechanism.
  • Two techniques were used to observe the process: dynamic light scattering showed crystals form after a delay post-cluster formation, and dark-field microscopy tracked the transition from clusters to freely diffusing crystals.
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The two-dimensional single shot transverse coherence of the Self-Amplified Spontaneous Emission of the SPARC_LAB Free-Electron Laser was measured through the statistical analysis of a speckle field produced by heterodyning the radiation beam with a huge number of reference waves, scattered by a suspension of particles. In this paper we report the measurements and the evaluation of the transverse coherence along the SPARC_LAB undulator modules. The measure method was demonstrated to be precise and robust, it does not require any a priori assumptions and can be implemented over a wide range of wavelengths, from the optical radiation to the x-rays.

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By using the critical Casimir force, we study the attractive strength dependent aggregation of colloids with and without gravity by means of near field scattering. Significant differences were seen between microgravity and ground experiments, both in the structure of the formed fractal aggregates as well as in the kinetics of growth. In microgravity purely diffusive aggregation is observed.

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