Department of Materials Science
Highly luminescent scintillating hybrid nanocrystals that mimic natural light-harvesters
The Stokes shift is an important property of luminescent materials, defined as the energy difference between the absorption band maximum and the emission spectrum maximum. Large Stokes shift fast emitters show a negligible reabsorption of their luminescence, a feature highly desirable for several applications such as fluorescence imaging, solar-light managing, and fabricating sensitive scintillating detectors for medical imaging and high-rate high-energy physics experiments.
Inorganic, enzymatic and microbial electrocatalysts for the oxygen reduction reaction in neutral pH electrolyte
Abiotic and biotic electrocatalysts are crucial for the reduction of oxygen in neutral media associated to bioelectrochemical systems. This interdisciplinary field of study covers electrocatalysis, electrochemistry, inorganic electrocatalysis, bioelectrochemistry, engineering of electrodes and transport phenomena at different spatial scale.
FLEXILAB and photovoltaics: a multi-tasking, green approach to harnessing solar energy
Industrial development and population growth have led to a surge in global energy demand. At the same time, ongoing climate and geopolitical crises are demanding a rapid transition to a greener, zero-emissions economy.
Among the technologies that can address the global energy problem is photovoltaics one of the five research topics addressed by the FLEXILAB Project, "Departments of Excellence Project 2018-2022”.
Developing the supertyre: the collaboration between Pirelli and the Department of Materials Science
From a laboratory research activity on innovative and sustainable materials to the production on a large scale of a highly performing tyre. How?
Perspective on nanoscintillators
New battery technologies for vehicles and electronic devices
Energy storage is one of the keys to the management and distribution of energy resources in the coming years. Three major application areas can be identified, which are delineated by the size of the storage devices: portable applications, automotive and support/management of electricity grids.