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Alessandro Tredicucci

Researcher at University of Pisa

Publications -  343
Citations -  17844

Alessandro Tredicucci is an academic researcher from University of Pisa. The author has contributed to research in topics: Laser & Terahertz radiation. The author has an hindex of 57, co-authored 329 publications receiving 16545 citations. Previous affiliations of Alessandro Tredicucci include Alcatel-Lucent & Sant'Anna School of Advanced Studies.

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Science and technology roadmap for graphene, related two-dimensional crystals, and hybrid systems

Andrea C. Ferrari, +68 more
- 04 Mar 2015 - 
TL;DR: An overview of the key aspects of graphene and related materials, ranging from fundamental research challenges to a variety of applications in a large number of sectors, highlighting the steps necessary to take GRMs from a state of raw potential to a point where they might revolutionize multiple industries are provided.
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Terahertz semiconductor-heterostructure laser

TL;DR: A monolithic terahertz injection laser that is based on interminiband transitions in the conduction band of a semiconductor (GaAs/AlGaAs) heterostructure is reported, which is very promising for extending the present laser concept to continuous-wave and high-temperature operation, which would lead to implementation in practical photonic systems.

Terahertz semiconductor heterostructure laser

TL;DR: In this article, a monolithic terahertz injection laser that is based on interminiband transitions in the conduction band of a semiconductor (GaAs/AlGaAs) heterostructure is presented.
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Graphene field-effect transistors as room-temperature terahertz detectors

TL;DR: In this paper, an efficient room-temperature graphene detector for terahertz radiation was presented, which promises to be considerably faster than competing techniques, and is shown to have high carrier mobility.
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Sub-cycle switch-on of ultrastrong light–matter interaction

TL;DR: This work uses a quantum-well waveguide structure to optically tune light–matter interaction from weak to ultrastrong and turn on maximum coupling within less than one cycle of light, and directly monitors how a coherent photon population converts to cavity polaritons during abrupt switching.