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Dive into the research topics where Hajnalka M. Tóháti is active.

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Featured researches published by Hajnalka M. Tóháti.


Small | 2014

Interactions and chemical transformations of coronene inside and outside carbon nanotubes

Bea Botka; Melinda Emese Füstös; Hajnalka M. Tóháti; Katalin Németh; Gyöngyi Klupp; Zsolt Szekrényes; Dorina Kocsis; M. Utczás; Edit Székely; Tamás Váczi; György Tarczay; R. Hackl; Thomas W. Chamberlain; Andrei N. Khlobystov; Katalin Kamarás

By exposing flat and curved carbon surfaces to coronene, a variety of van der Waals hybrid heterostructures are prepared, including coronene encapsulated in carbon nanotubes, and coronene and dicoronylene adsorbed on nanotubes or graphite via π-π interactions. The structure of the final product is determined by the temperature of the experiment and the curvature of the carbon surface. While at temperatures below and close to the sublimation point of coronene, nanotubes with suitable diameters are filled with single coronene molecules, at higher temperatures additional dimerization and oligomerization of coronene occurs on the surface of carbon nanotubes. The fact that dicoronylene and possible higher oligomers are formed at lower temperatures than expected for vapor-phase polymerization indicates the active role of the carbon surface used primarily as template. Removal of adsorbed species from the nanotube surface is of utmost importance for reliable characterization of encapsulated molecules: it is demonstrated that the green fluorescence attributed previously to encapsulated coronene is instead caused by dicoronylene adsorbed on the surface which can be solubilized and removed using surfactants. After removing most of the adsorbed layer, a combination of Raman spectroscopy and transmission electron microscopy was employed to follow the transformation dynamics of coronene molecules inside nanotubes.


European Physical Journal B | 2014

Bundle versus network conductivity of carbon nanotubes separated by type

Hajnalka M. Tóháti; Áron Pekker; Bálint Á. Pataki; Zsolt Szekrényes; Katalin Kamarás

We report wide-range optical investigations on transparent conducting networks made from separated (semiconducting, metallic) and reference (mixed) single-walled carbon nanotubes, complemented by transport measurements. Comparing the intrinsic frequency-dependent conductivity of the nanotubes with that of the networks, we conclude that higher intrinsic conductivity results in better transport properties, indicating that the properties of the nanotubes are at least as much important as the contacts. We find that HNO3 doping offers a larger improvement in transparent conductive quality than separation. Spontaneous dedoping occurs in all samples but is most effective in films made of doped metallic tubes, where the sheet conductance returns close to its original value within 24 h.


Nanoscale | 2016

Ultrasensitive 1D field-effect phototransistors: CH3NH3PbI3 nanowire sensitized individual carbon nanotubes

Massimo Spina; Bálint Náfrádi; Hajnalka M. Tóháti; Katalin Kamarás; Eric Bonvin; R. Gaal; László Forró; Endre Horváth

Field-effect phototransistors were fabricated based on individual carbon nanotubes (CNTs) sensitized by CH3NH3PbI3 nanowires (MAPbI3NWs). These devices represent light responsivities of R = 7.7 × 10(5) A W(-1) under low-lighting conditions in the nW mm(-2) range, unprecedented among CNT-based photodetectors. At high incident power (∼1 mW mm(-2)), light soaking results in a negative photocurrent, turning the device insulating. We interpret the phenomenon as a result of efficient free photoexcited charge generation and charge transfer of photoexcited holes from the perovskite to the carbon nanotube. The charge transfer improves conductance by increasing the number of carriers, but leaves electrons behind. At high illumination intensity their random electrostatic potential quenches mobility in the nanotube.


Chemsuschem | 2011

Carbon nanotube-based metal-ion catchers as supramolecular depolluting materials.

Laura Maggini; Federica De Leo; Riccardo Marega; Hajnalka M. Tóháti; Katalin Kamarás; Davide Bonifazi

Herein, we report the first example of supramolecular carbon nanotube (CNT)-based ion catchers as simple and effective tools for removing divalent metal ions from organic solvents. In particular, covalently functionalized multi-walled carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs) appended with pyridyl groups self-aggregate in solution into bundles in the presence of divalent metal ions (e.g., Cd²⁺, Cu²⁺, Ni²⁺, Pb²⁺, Zn²⁺). Such self-aggregation behavior leads to insoluble materials that, upon treatment with weak acids, can be regenerated and reused for further complexation. All materials and complexation/decomplexation steps were thoroughly characterized by using X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), thermogravimetric analysis (TGA), and different microscopy-based techniques, namely, transmission electron, scanning electron, and atomic force microscopy (TEM, SEM, and AFM). The supramolecular system engineered in this work is the first example of an easy and fully sustainable material with great potential applications for depolluting liquid waste from metal contamination.


Chemical Physics Letters | 2015

Breakdown of diameter selectivity in a reductive hydrogenation reaction of single-walled carbon nanotubes

Katalin Németh; Emma Jakab; Ferenc Borondics; Hajnalka M. Tóháti; Áron Pekker; Mónika Zsuzsanna Bokor; Tamas Verebelyi; K. Tompa; S. Pekker; Katalin Kamarás

Abstract Reductive hydrogenation was applied to two types of single-walled carbon nanotubes with different diameter range. Alkali metal intercalation, followed by reaction with methanol, led to hydrogenated products. Both yield and selectivity of this reaction showed strong dependence on diameter, contrary to expectation based on simple curvature effects. The observed yield, as detected by thermogravimetry–mass spectrometry and 1 H NMR, is drastically reduced in small-diameter tubes where the alkali dopant does not reach the inside of the bundles. Wide range optical transmission measurements were employed to determine the selectivity and indicate that besides higher yield, lower diameter selectivity occurs above a critical diameter.


Physica Status Solidi B-basic Solid State Physics | 2010

Infrared and Raman investigation of carbon nanotube-polyallylamine hybrid systems

Hajnalka M. Tóháti; Bea Botka; Katalin Németh; Áron Pekker; R. Hackl; Katalin Kamarás


Physica Status Solidi B-basic Solid State Physics | 2016

Cloaking by π‐electrons in the infrared

Áron Pekker; Gergely Németh; Ákos Botos; Hajnalka M. Tóháti; Ferenc Borondics; Zoltán Osváth; László Péter Biró; Kate F. Walker; Andrei N. Khlobystov; Katalin Kamarás


Small Methods | 2017

Growth of Carbon Nanotubes inside Boron Nitride Nanotubes by Coalescence of Fullerenes: Toward the World's Smallest Coaxial Cable

Kate E. Walker; Graham A. Rance; Áron Pekker; Hajnalka M. Tóháti; Michael W. Fay; Rhys W. Lodge; Craig T. Stoppiello; Katalin Kamarás; Andrei N. Khlobystov


Small Methods | 2017

Nanoreactors: Growth of Carbon Nanotubes inside Boron Nitride Nanotubes by Coalescence of Fullerenes: Toward the World's Smallest Coaxial Cable (Small Methods 9/2017)

Kate E. Walker; Graham A. Rance; Áron Pekker; Hajnalka M. Tóháti; Michael W. Fay; Rhys W. Lodge; Craig T. Stoppiello; Katalin Kamarás; Andrei N. Khlobystov


Proceedings of the 2nd Asia-Pacific Hybrid and Organic Photovoltaics | 2017

Organic-inorganic lead halide perovskite nanowires: formation mechanism and optoelectronic applications

Endre Horváth; Massimo Spina; Bálint Náfrádi; Eric Bonvin; Márton Kollár; Andrzej Sienkievicz; Anastasiia Glushkova; Alla Aracheeva; Zsolt Szekrényes; Hajnalka M. Tóháti

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Katalin Kamarás

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Áron Pekker

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Gergely Németh

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Katalin Németh

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Zsolt Szekrényes

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Bálint Náfrádi

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Endre Horváth

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Bea Botka

Bavarian Academy of Sciences and Humanities

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R. Hackl

Bavarian Academy of Sciences and Humanities

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