Katalin Kamarás
Hungarian Academy of Sciences
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Featured researches published by Katalin Kamarás.
Carbon | 2008
P. Nemes-Incze; Zoltán Osváth; Katalin Kamarás; L.P. Biró
Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM) in the tapping (intermittent contact) mode is a commonly used tool to measure the thickness of graphene and few layer graphene (FLG) flakes on silicon oxide surfaces. It is a convenient tool to quickly determine the thickness of individual FLG films. However, reports from literature show a large variation of the measured thickness of graphene layers. This paper is focused on the imaging mechanism of tapping mode AFM (TAFM) when measuring graphene and FLG thickness, and we show that at certain measurement parameters significant deviations can be introduced in the measured thickness of FLG flakes. An increase of as much as 1 nm can be observed in the measured height of FLG crystallites, when using an improperly chosen range of free amplitude values of the tapping cantilever. We present comparative Raman spectroscopy and TAFM measurements on selected single and multilayer graphene films, based on which we suggest ways to correctly measure graphene and FLG thickness using TAFM.
Nano Letters | 2014
Endre Horváth; Massimo Spina; Zsolt Szekrényes; Katalin Kamarás; R. Gaal; David Gachet; László Forró
We report the synthesis of Methylammonium Lead Iodide (CH(3)NH(3)PbI(3)) nanowires by a low temperature solution processed crystallization using a simple slip-coating method. The anisotropic particle shape exhibits advantages over nanoparticles in terms of charge transport under illumination. These results provide a basis for solvent-mediated tailoring of structural properties like the crystallite size and orientation in trihalide perovskite thin films, which, once implemented into a device, may ultimately result in an enhanced charge carrier extraction.
Journal of Physics C: Solid State Physics | 1977
Katalin Kamarás; K. Ritvay-Emandity; G. Mihály; G. Grüner; N Rysava
Variations in the conductivity of QN(TCNQ)2 depending on sample preparation are correlated with the presence of doubly ionised TCNQ in the samples. Increasing TCNQ2- concentration results in decreasing conductivity and increasing activation energy. The influence of D+ impurities compensating the excess charge is discussed.
Physical Review B | 2006
Ferenc Borondics; Katalin Kamarás; Maria Nikolou
We report the transmission over a wide frequency range (far infrared - visible) of pristine and hole-doped, free-standing carbon nanotube films at temperatures between 50 K and 300 K. Optical constants are estimated by Kramers-Kronig analysis of transmittance. We see evidence in the far infrared for a gap below 10 meV. Hole doping causes a shift of spectral weight from the first interband transition into the far infrared. Temperature dependence in both the doped and undoped samples is restricted to the far-infrared region.
Physical Review B | 2011
Áron Pekker; Katalin Kamarás
We present wide-range (3 meV - 6 eV) optical studies on freestanding transparent carbon nanotube films, made from nanotubes with different diameter distributions. In the far-infrared region, we found a low-energy gap in all samples investigated. By a detailed analysis we determined the average diameters of both the semiconducting and metallic species from the near infrared/visible features of the spectra. Having thus established the dependence of the gap value on the mean diameter, we find that the frequency of the low energy gap is increasing with increasing curvature. Our results strongly support the explanation of the low-frequency feature as arising from a curvature-induced gap instead of effective medium effects. Comparing our results with other theoretical and experimental low-energy gap values, we find that optical measurements yield a systematically lower gap than tunneling spectroscopy and DFT calculations, the difference increasing with decreasing diameter. This difference can be assigned to electron-hole interactions.
Applied Physics Letters | 2011
David Beke; Zsolt Szekrényes; István Balogh; M. Veres; Éva Fazakas; L.K. Varga; Katalin Kamarás; Zsolt Czigány; Adam Gali
Fabrication of nanosized silicon carbide crystals is a crucial aspect for many biomedical applications. Here, we report an effective fabrication method of silicon carbide nanocrystals based on the reactive bonding method followed by electroless wet chemical etching. Our samples show strong violet-blue emission in the 410–450 nm region depending on the used solvents. Raman and infrared measurements unraveled the surface bonding structure of the fabricated nanoparticles being different from silicon carbide microcrystals. This might give an opportunity to use standard chemistry methods for biological functionalization of such nanoparticles.
Science Advances | 2015
Ruth H. Zadik; Yasuhiro Takabayashi; Gyoengyi Klupp; Ross H. Colman; Alexey Y. Ganin; Anton Potočnik; P. Jeglič; Denis Arčon; Péter Matus; Katalin Kamarás; Yuichi Kasahara; Yoshihiro Iwasa; Andrew N. Fitch; Yasuo Ohishi; Gaston Garbarino; Kenichi Kato; Matthew J. Rosseinsky; Kosmas Prassides
A superconductivity dome is created by the electronic structure of the molecular building block of an unconventional superconductor. Understanding the relationship between the superconducting, the neighboring insulating, and the normal metallic state above Tc is a major challenge for all unconventional superconductors. The molecular A3C60 fulleride superconductors have a parent antiferromagnetic insulator in common with the atom-based cuprates, but here, the C603– electronic structure controls the geometry and spin state of the structural building unit via the on-molecule Jahn-Teller effect. We identify the Jahn-Teller metal as a fluctuating microscopically heterogeneous coexistence of both localized Jahn-Teller–active and itinerant electrons that connects the insulating and superconducting states of fullerides. The balance between these molecular and extended lattice features of the electrons at the Fermi level gives a dome-shaped variation of Tc with interfulleride separation, demonstrating molecular electronic structure control of superconductivity.
Physical Review B | 2010
K. Thirunavukkuarasu; Frank Hennrich; Katalin Kamarás; C. A. Kuntscher
The electronic properties of as-prepared and purified unoriented single-walled carbon nanotube films were studied by transmission measurements over a broad frequency range (far-infrared up to visible) as a function of temperature (15 K - 295 K) and external pressure (up to 8 GPa). Both the as-prepared and the purified SWCNT films exhibit nearly temperature-independent properties. With increasing pressure the low-energy absorbance decreases suggesting an increasing carrier localization due to pressure-induced deformations. The energy of the optical transitions in the SWCNTs decreases with increasing pressure, which can be attributed to pressure-induced hybridization and symmetry-breaking effects. We find an anomaly in the pressure-induced shift of the optical transitions at �2 GPa due to a structural phase transition.
Small | 2014
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.
Physical Review B | 2006
Gyöngyi Klupp; Katalin Kamarás; N. M. Nemes; Craig M. Brown; Juscelino B. Leao
We report the temperature dependent mid- and near-infrared spectra of K4C60, Rb4C60, and Cs4C60. The splitting of the vibrational and electronic transitions indicates a molecular symmetry change of C-60(4-) which brings the fulleride anion from D-2h to either a D-3d or a D-5d distortion. In contrast to Cs4C60, low temperature neutron diffraction measurements did not reveal a structural phase transition in either K4C60 and Rb4C60. This proves that the molecular transition is driven by the molecular Jahn-Teller effect, which overrides the distorting potential field of the surrounding cations at high temperature. In K4C60 and Rb4C60 we suggest a transition from a static to a dynamic Jahn-Teller state without changing the average structure. We studied the librations of these two fullerides by temperature dependent inelastic neutron scattering and conclude that both pseudorotation and jump reorientation are present in the dynamic Jahn-Teller state.