Researcher profile

Emmanuel Stratakis

Emmanuel Stratakis contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

10 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

It's not the Language Model, it's the Tool: Deterministic Mediation for Scientific Workflows

Language models can produce convincing scientific analyses, but repeated generations on the same data do not guarantee the same result. A researcher may regenerate an identical query and receive a different fit, a different peak position or a different analysis procedure, without an obvious way to decide which output to trust. We propose typed mediation, a pattern in which the model orchestrates deterministic tools rather than generating analytical code. Each tool encodes one researcher's exact procedure for one instrument, ported through structured interviews. The model selects which tool to call and with what parameters. The tool produces the result. Regeneration does not change it. We evaluate this claim by running the same photoluminescence analysis on four platforms, including three commercial foundation models, four times each with the same prompt. The typed tool produces identical results across all runs. The commercial platforms either vary in numerical output and analytical methodology across runs, or fail to produce valid results on the task. We deploy this pattern on two instruments serving users over approximately six months, with very positive user feedback. Both cases are very challenging: they involve proprietary binary formats and per-seat licensed software, which force the tool to remain on local infrastructure alongside the data and the instrument it operates. We argue that deployment topology is not just a preference, but a structural requirement of scientific tool mediation. The result is a practical pattern for deploying language models in scientific workflows where reproducibility is mandatory, reducing analysis time from weeks to minutes while guaranteeing identical outputs across runs.

preprint2022arXiv

Damage threshold evaluation of thin metallic films exposed to femtosecond laser pulses: the role of material thickness

The employment of femtosecond pulsed lasers has received significant attention due to its capability to facilitate fabrication of precise patterns at the micro- and nano- lengths scales. A key issue for efficient material processing is the accurate determination of the damage threshold that is associated with the laser peak fluence at which minimal damage occurs on the surface of the irradiated solid. Despite a wealth of previous reports that focused on the evaluation of the laser conditions that lead to the onset of damage, the investigation of both the optical and thermal response of thin films of sizes comparable to the optical penetration depth is still an unexplored area. In this report, a detailed theoretical analysis of the impact of various parameters such as the photon energies and material thickness on the damage threshold for various metals (Au, Ag, Cu, Al, Ni, Ti, Cr, Stainless Steel) is investigated. A multiscale physical model is used that correlates the energy absorption, electron excitation, relaxation processes and minimal surface modification which leads to the onset of material damage. The satisfactory agreement of the theoretical model with some experimental results indicates that the damage threshold evaluation method could represent a systematic approach towards designing efficient laser-based fabrication systems and optimizing the processing outcome for various applications.

preprint2022arXiv

Probing the carrier dynamics of polymer composites with single and hybrid carbon nanotube fillers for improved thermoelectric performance

The incorporation of carbon nanotubes (CNTs) within polymer hosts offers a great platform for the development of advanced thermoelectric (TE) composite materials. Over the years, several CNT/polymer composite formulations have been investigated on an effort to maximize the TE performance. Meanwhile, several studies focused on the decay dynamics of the charged excitons within CNTs itself and therefrom derived structures, aiming to investigate the lifetimes and the corresponding recombination processes of free charge carriers. The latter physical phenomena play a crucial role in the performance of various types of energy converting and scavenging materials. Nevertheless, up to this date, there is no systematic study on the combination of TE parameters and the critical charge carrier dynamics within CNT containing TE polymer composites. Herein, a variety of composites with single and hybrid CNT fillers based on polycarbonate (PC) and polyether ether ketone (PEEK) polymer matrices were prepared by melt-mixing in small scale. At the same loading, the addition of single fillers in PC results in higher Seebeck coefficients and similar conductivities when compared to the use of hybrid filler systems. In contrast, with hybrid filler systems in PEEK composites, higher power factors could be reached than in single filler composites. Moreover, the PC-based composites are studied using ultrafast laser time-resolved transient absorption spectroscopy (TAS), for the investigation of the exciton lifetimes and the physical origins of free charge carrier transport within the TE films. The findings of this study reveal interesting links between the TE parameters and the obtained charge carrier dynamics.

preprint2022arXiv

The impact of the substrate on the opto-thermal response of thin metallic targets following irradiation with femtosecond laser pulses

Femtosecond pulsed lasers have been widely used over the past decades due to their capability to fabricate precise patterns at the micro- and nano- lengths scales. A key issue for efficient material processing is the determination of the laser parameters used in the experimental set ups. Despite a systematic investigation that has been performed to highlight the impact of every parameter independently, little attention has been drawn on the role of the substrate material on which the irradiated solid is placed. In this work, the influence of the substrate is emphasised for films of various thicknesses which demonstrates that both the optical and thermophysical properties of the substrate affect the thermal fingerprint on the irradiated film while the impact is manifested to be higher at smaller film sizes. Two representative materials, silicon and fused silica have been selected as typical substrates for thin films of different optical and thermophysical behaviour (gold and nickel) and the thermal response and damage thresholds are evaluated for the irradiated solids. The pronounced influence of the substrate is aimed to pave the way for new and more optimised designs of laser-based fabrication set ups and processing schemes.

preprint2021arXiv

In-plane anisotropic quantum confinement effect in ultrasmall SnS sheets

Black phosphorus (BP) analogous tin(II) sulfide (SnS) has recently emerged as an attractive building block for electronic devices due to its highly anisotropic response. Two-dimensional (2D) SnS has shown to exhibit in-plane anisotropy in optical and electrical properties. However, the limitations in growing ultrasmall structures of SnS hinder the experimental exploration of anisotropic behavior in low dimension. Here, we present an elegant approach of synthesizing highly crystalline nanometer-sized SnS sheets. Ultrasmall SnS exhibits two distinct valleys along armchair and zig-zag directions due to in-plane structural anisotropy like bulk SnS. We show that in such SnS nanosheet dots, the band gaps corresponding to two valleys are increased due to quantum confinement effect. We particularly observe that SnS quantum dots (QDs) show excitation energy dependent photoluminescence (PL), which originates from the two nondegenerate valleys. Our work may open up an avenue to show the potential of SnS QDs for new functionalities in electronics and optoelectronics.

preprint2021arXiv

Tailoring Sub-micrometer Periodic Surface Structures via Ultrashort Pulsed Direct Laser Interference Patterning

Direct laser Interference Patterning (DLIP) with ultrashort laser pulses (ULP) represents a precise and fast technique to produce tailored periodic sub-micrometer structures on various materials. In this work, an experimental and theoretical approach is presented to investigate the previously unexplored fundamental mechanisms for the formation of unprecedented laser-induced topographies on stainless steel following proper combinations of DLIP with ULP. DLIP is aimed to determine the initial conditions of the laser-matter interaction by defining an ablated region while double ULP are used to control the reorganisation of the self-assembled laser induced sub-micrometer sized structures by exploiting the interplay of different absorption and excitation levels coupled with the melt hydrodynamics induced by the first of the double pulses. A multiscale physical model is presented to correlate the interference period, polarization orientation and number of incident pulses with the induced morphologies. Special emphasis is given to electron excitation, relaxation processes and hydrodynamical effects that are crucial to the production of complex morphologies. Results are expected to derive new knowledge of laser-matter interaction in combined DLIP and ULP conditions and enable enhanced fabrication capabilities of complex hierarchical sub-micrometer sized structures for a variety of applications.

preprint2020arXiv

Ionisation processes and laser induced periodic surface structures in dielectrics with mid-infrared femtosecond laser pulses

Irradiation of solids with ultrashort pulses and laser processing in the mid-Infrared (mid-IR) spectral region is a yet predominantly unexplored field with a large potential for a wide range of applications. In this work, laser driven physical phenomena associated with processes following irradiation of fused silica (SiO2) with ultrashort laser pulses in the mid-IR region are investigated in detail. A multiscale modelling approach is performed that correlates conditions for formation of perpendicular or parallel to the laser polarisation low spatial frequency periodic surface structures for low and high intensity mid-IR pulses (not previously explored in dielectrics at those wavelengths), respectively. Results demonstrate a remarkable domination of tunneling effects in the photoionisation rate and a strong influence of impact ionisation for long laser wavelengths. The methodology presented in this work is aimed to shed light on the fundamental mechanisms in a previously unexplored spectral area and allow a systematic novel surface engineering with strong mid-IR fields for advanced industrial laser applications.

preprint2020arXiv

Molding Wetting by Laser-Induced Nanostructures

The influence of material characteristics - i.e., type or surface texture - to wetting properties is nowadays increased by the implementation of ultrafast lasers for nanostructuring. In this account, we exposed multilayer thin metal film samples of different materials to a femtosecond laser beam at a 1030 nm wavelength. The interaction generated high-quality laser-induced periodic surface structures (LIPSS) of spatial periods between 740 and 790 nm and with maximal average corrugation height below 100 nm. The contact angle (CA) values of the water droplets on the surface were estimated and the values between unmodified and modified samples were compared. Even though the laser interaction changed both the surface morphology and the chemical composition, the wetting properties were predominantly influenced by the small change in morphology causing the increase in the contact angle of ~80%, which could not be explained classically. The influence of both surface corrugation and chemical composition to the wetting properties has been thoroughly investigated, discussed and explained. The presented results clearly confirm that femtosecond patterning can be used to mold wetting properties.

preprint2020arXiv

Probing valley population imbalance in transition metal dichalcogenides via temperature-dependent second harmonic generation imaging

Degenerate minima in momentum space - valleys - provide an additional degree of freedom that can be used for information transport and storage. Notably, such minima naturally exist in the band structure of transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs). When these atomically thin crystals interact with intense laser light, the second harmonic generated (SHG) field inherits special characteristics that reflect not only the broken inversion symmetry in real space, but also the valley anisotropy in reciprocal space. The latter is present whenever there exists a valley population imbalance (VPI) between the two valleys. In this work, it is shown that the temperature-induced changes of the SHG intensity dependence on the excitation fieldpolarization, is a unique fingerprint of VPI in TMDs. Analysis of such changes, in particular, enables the calculation of the valley-induced to intrinsic second order susceptibilities ratio. Unlike temperature-dependent photoluminescence (PL) measurements of valley polarization and coherence, the proposed polarization resolved SHG (PSHG) methodology is insensitive to the excitation field wavelength, an advantage that renders it ideal for monitoring VPI in large crystalline or stacked areas comprising different TMDs.

preprint2019arXiv

Efficient and environmental-friendly perovskite solar cells via embedding plasmonic nanoparticles: an optical simulation study on realistic device architecture

Solution-processed, lead halide-based perovskite solar cells have overcome important challenges over the recent years, offering low-cost and high solar power conversion efficiencies. However, they still undergo unoptimized light collection due mainly to the thin (~350 nm) polycrystalline absorber layers. Moreover, their high toxicity (due to the presence of lead in the perovskite crystalline structure) makes it necessary that the thickness of the absorber layers to be further reduced, for their future commercialization, without reducing the device performance. Here we aim to address these issues via embedding spherical plasmonic nanoparticles of various sizes, composition, concentrations, and vertical positions, for the first time in realistic halide-based perovskite solar cells architecture, and to clarify their effect on the absorption properties and enhancement. We theoretically show that plasmon-enhanced near-field effects and scattering leads to a device photocurrent enhancement of up to ~7.3% when silver spheres are embedded inside the perovskite layer. Interestingly, the combination of silver spheres in perovskite and aluminum spheres inside the hole transporting layer (PEDOT:PSS) of the solar cell leads to an even further enhancement, of up to ~12%. This approach allows the employment of much thinner perovskite layers in PSCs (up to 150 nm) to reach the same photocurrent as the nanoparticles-free device and reducing thus significantly the toxicity of the device. Providing the requirements related to the size, shape, position, composition, and concentration of nanoparticles for the PSCs photocurrent enhancement, our study establishes guidelines for a future development of highly-efficient, environmentally friendly and low-cost plasmonic perovskite solar cells.