Roberto Osellame
Cnr Ifn
Personal website with research activity: https://ifn.cnr.it/people/roberto-osellame
Curriculum Vitae
Roberto Osellame received the Laurea Degree (cum laude) in Electronic Engineering from the Politecnico di Milano (Italy) in 1996 and the Ph.D. degree in Physics from the Politecnico di Torino (Italy) in 2000. Since 2001 he is a Staff Researcher of the Institute for Photonics and Nanotechnologies (IFN) of the Italian National Research Council (CNR), where he became Senior Researcher in 2007 and Director of Research in 2019. Since 2001 to 2022 he has been a Contract Professor at the Politecnico di Milano, teaching different Physics courses and starting a course on 'Quantum Optics and Information'. Dr. Osellame has been one of the pioneers in femtosecond laser micromachining of transparent materials. His research activity includes the development of photonic circuits for quantum information, the fabrication by two photon polymerization of micro/nano-structures of arbitrary geometry, and the development of lab-on-a-chip and optofluidic devices. He is author of more than 250 publications on major international journals and holds 15 patents in the field of optics and photonics technology. He has been awarded the 'Ricerca.tissimi' prize of Regione Lombardia as one of the 20 best researchers in the 'life sciences' field. He has been awarded the CNR prize in 2009 for 'results of particular excellence and strategic national and international relevance'. He is co-Chair of the conference Frontiers in Ultrafast Optics within Photonics West. He has been involved in several European projects and has been the Coordinator of FP7-microFLUID project. He has been awarded an ERC Advanced Grant in the 2016 call. He is Fellow of the Optical Society of America (now OPTICA).
Research groups
FIRE
LIFE
AQUA
CAPABLE
DIAMOND
SNOW
Thesis
Micro/nano-strutturazioni laser di materiali polimerici per dispositivi tridimensionali
Scrittura diretta di circuiti ottici integrati per esperimenti di ottica quantistica
Sensori integrati in dispositivi microfluidici mediante fabbricazione con impulsi laser a femtosecondi