Introduction
Under the guidance of Prof. Claudio Manfredotti,
the Solid State Physics group of the University of Torino,
Physics Department,started its activity in the early 1980s in the field of amorphous (a-Si:H) and crystalline (e.g. Si, CdTe)
semiconductor materials, mainly for the fabrication of solar cells and ionization radiation detectors.
In the course of these three decades, the group has gradually extended its field of interest to the study of micro/nano-structured materials and devices and to the development of new experimental techniques for the characterization and modification of advanced materials and/or art objects.
Now, the group is working on the following main research topics:
- Semiconductor materials and basic devices: functional characterization by means of MeV Ion Beam techniques
- The physics of diamond: characterization, and selective modification at the nano/micro scale; applications in bio-sensing and quantum optics
- Production and characterisation of high and medium critical temperature superconducting materials
- Nanostructured materials
- Physics applied to cultural heritage
3 December 2024, h. 16.15
Aula C, Dipartimento di Fisica, Torino Dalla Fisica alle Reti Neurali (e ritorno). Il Nobel a Hopfield e Hinton17 october 2024
Alessandro Re and Paolo Olivero deliver two online lectures
(respectively entitled
"La fisica per l'arte: vedere l'invisibile"
and "La fisica preziosa: diamanti artificiali")
for the Academy of Science of Torino in the framework of the "La Fisica dove meno te l'aspetti" public engagement initiative.
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The contribution entitled
"Nanodiamonds Functionalized with Hyaluronic Acid-Phospholipids Conjugates: A Promising Platform for Cancer Cells Targeting and Tumor Treatment"
presented by S. Sturari at the
34th International Conference on Diamond and Carbon Materials"
is awarded with the ICDCM2024 Young Scholar Award.
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