6 results match your criteria: "CNR-Institute for the Study of Nanostructured Materials[Affiliation]"

Superconducting nanofilms are tunable systems that can host a 3D-2D dimensional crossover leading to the Berezinskii-Kosterlitz-Thouless (BKT) superconducting transition approaching the 2D regime. Reducing the dimensionality further, from 2D to quasi-1D superconducting nanostructures with disorder, can generate quantum and thermal phase slips (PS) of the order parameter. Both BKT and PS are complex phase-fluctuation phenomena of difficult experiments.

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The fabrication of enzyme-based biosensors has received much attention for their selectivity and sensitivity. In particular, laccase-based biosensors have attracted a lot of interest for their capacity to detect highly toxic molecules in the environment, becoming essential tools in the fields of white biotechnology and green chemistry. The manufacturing of a new, metal-free, laccase-based biosensor with unprecedented reuse and storage capabilities has been achieved in this work through the application of the electrospray deposition (ESD) methodology as the enzyme immobilization technique.

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A stable and improved control of the wettability of textiles was obtained by using a coating of diamond like carbon (DLC) films on cotton by PECVD. By controlling different plasma pretreatments of argon, oxygen, and hydrogen on the cotton fibers' surface, we have shown that the pretreatments had a significant impact on wettability behavior resulting from an induced nanoscale roughness combined with an incorporation of selected functional groups. Upon subsequent deposition of diamond like carbon (DLC) films, the cotton fibers yield to a highly controlled chemical stability and hydrophobic state and could be used for self-cleaning applications.

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We describe a setup suitable for simultaneously measuring optical and electrical properties of a liquid crystal mesophase upon temperature variation, and the difference in the order parameters between the bulk and the interface with the substrate. It integrates high-resolution polarized light optical microscopy, temperature regulation, and electrical measurements in a controlled atmosphere with a software kernel that controls the instruments and synchronizes the data streams. A user-friendly interface allows us to program multistep experiments controlling all the instruments and data acquisition by a specifically designed scheduler.

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We show that ultrathin films of a semiconductive discotic liquid crystal, viz. phthalocyanines, can be organized to form a conductive channel tens of microns long between Au electrodes with thickness control over a single monolayer. Our approach exploits the electromigration of the isotropic phase formed starting from the pretransitional region of the columnar-isotropic phase transition.

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We investigate by a scanning probe technique termed phase-electrostatic force microscopy the local electrostatic potential and its correlation to the morphology of the organic semiconductor layer in operating ultra-thin film pentacene field effect transistors. This technique yields a lateral resolution of about 60 nm, allowing us to visualize that the voltage drop across the transistor channel is step-wise. Spatially localized voltage drops, adding up to about 75% of the potential difference between source and drain, are clearly correlated to the morphological domain boundaries in the pentacene film.

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