Publications by authors named "P Fumagalli"

Silver nanoparticles on a glass substrate are experimentally investigated by aperture scanning near-field optical microscopy (a-SNOM). To understand the experimental results, finite-element-method simulations are performed building a theoretical model of the a-SNOM geometry. We systematically vary parameters like aperture size, aluminum-coating thickness, tip cone angle, and tip-surface distance and discuss their influence on the near-field enhancement.

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Metal-free heterogeneous catalysis is promising in the context of H generation. Therefore, establishing structure-activity relationships is a crucial issue to improve the development of more efficient catalysts. Herein, to evaluate the reactivity of the oxygen functionalities in carbonaceous materials, commercial functionalized pyrolytically stripped carbon nanofibers (CNFs) were used as catalysts in the liquid-phase hydrous hydrazine decomposition process and its activity was compared to that of a pristine CNF material.

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We present a combined real and reciprocal space structural and microstructural characterization of CeO nanoparticles (NPs) exhibiting different crystallite sizes; ~3 nm CeO NPs were produced by an inverse micellae wet synthetic path and then annealed at different temperatures. X-ray total scattering data were analyzed by combining real-space-based Pair Distribution Function analysis and the reciprocal-space-based Debye Scattering Equation method with atomistic models. Subtle atomic-scale relaxations occur at the nanocrystal surface.

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Herein we report a combined experimental and computational investigation unravelling the hydrazine hydrate decomposition reaction on metal-free catalysts. The study focuses on commercial graphite and two different carbon nanofibers, pyrolytically stripped (CNF-PS) and high heat-treated (CNF-HHT), respectively, treated at 700 and 3000 °C to increase their intrinsic defects. Raman spectroscopy demonstrated a correlation between the initial catalytic activity and the intrinsic defectiveness of carbonaceous materials.

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Magnetic materials are usually classified into a distinct category such as diamagnets, paramagnets or ferromagnets. The enormous progress in materials science allows one nowadays, however, to change the magnetic nature of an element in a material. Gold, in bulk form, is traditionally a diamagnet.

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