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Dive into the research topics where Chan Jin Jeong is active.

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Featured researches published by Chan Jin Jeong.


Materials Science and Engineering: C | 2013

Recyclable and stable silver deposited magnetic nanoparticles with poly (vinyl pyrrolidone)-catechol coated iron oxide for antimicrobial activity.

Tamim Mosaiab; Chan Jin Jeong; Gyo Jic Shin; Kyung Ho Choi; Sang Kug Lee; Iksoo Lee; Insik In; Sung Young Park

This paper introduces a facile method to make highly stable and recyclable antimicrobial magnetic nanoparticles (NPs). Initially, magnetic iron oxide nanoparticles (IONPs) were coated with poly (vinyl pyrrolidone) conjugated catechol (PVP-CCDP). Afterward, silver nanoparticles (Ag(0)) were deposited onto PVP-CCDP coated IONPs using remain catechol. The prepared nanoparticles showed long term (~4 weeks) colloidal stability and redispersibility, respectively, against external magnetic field and over a broad range of pH (4-12). The NPs were characterized by UV-vis, SEM, XPS, and XRD measurements. TEM and DLS analyses showed that the mean particle size of PVP-CCDP coated IONPs/Ag(0) were about 72 nm. The recyclable magnetic NPs possessed a high antibacterial effect against the model microbes Staphylococcus aureus and Escherichia coli and could be separated easily using magnet following antibacterial test for repeated uses and maintained 100% antibacterial efficiency during three cycles. In MTT assay, the magnetic nanoparticles possessed no measureable cytotoxicity to live cells.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2015

Iron Oxide@PEDOT-Based Recyclable Photothermal Nanoparticles with Poly(vinylpyrrolidone) Sulfobetaines for Rapid and Effective Antibacterial Activity.

Chan Jin Jeong; Shazid Md. Sharker; Insik In; Sung Young Park

Growing microbial resistance that renders antibiotic treatment vulnerable has emerged, attracting a great deal of interest in the need to develop alternative antimicrobial treatments. To contribute to this effort, we report magnetic iron oxide (Fe3O4) nanoparticles (NPs) coated with catechol-conjugated poly(vinylpyrrolidone) sulfobetaines (C-PVPS). This negatively charged Fe3O4@C-PVPS is subsequently encapsulated by poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene) (PEDOT) following a layer-by-layer (LBL) self-assembly method. The obtained Fe3O4@C-PVPS:PEDOT nanoparticles appear to be novel NIR-irradiated photothermal agents that can achieve effective bacterial killing and are reusable after isolation of the used particles using external magnetic fields. The recyclable Fe3O4@C-PVPS:PEDOT NPs exhibit a high efficiency in converting photothermal heat for rapid antibacterial effects against Staphylococcus aureus and Escherichia coli. In this study, antibacterial tests for repeated uses maintained almost 100% antibacterial efficiency during three cycles and provided rapid and effective killing of 99% Gram-positive and -negative bacteria within 5 min of near-infrared (NIR) light exposure. The core-shell nanoparticles (Fe3O4@C-PVPS:PEDOT) exhibit the required stability, and their paramagnetic nature means that they rapidly convert photothermal heat sufficient for use as NIR-irradiated antibacterial photothermal sterilizing agents.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2015

Light Controllable Surface Coating for Effective Photothermal Killing of Bacteria

Sung Han Kim; Eun Bi Kang; Chan Jin Jeong; Shazid Md. Sharker; Insik In; Sung Young Park

Although the electronic properties of conducting films have been widely explored in optoelectronic fields, the optical absorption abilities of surface-coated films for photothermal conversion have been relatively less explored in the production of antibacterial coatings. Here, we present catechol-conjugated poly(vinylpyrrolidone) sulfobetaine (PVPS) and polyaniline (PANI) tightly linked by ionic interaction (PVPS:PANI) as a novel photothermal antibacterial agent for surface coating, which can absorb broadband near-infrared (NIR) light. Taking advantage of the NIR light absorption, this coating film can release eminent photothermal heat for the rapid killing of surface bacteria. The NIR light triggers a sharp rise in photothermal heat, providing the rapid and effective killing of 99.9% of the Gram-positive and -negative bacteria tested within 3 min of NIR light exposure when used at the concentration of 1 mg/mL. Although considerable progress has been made in the design of antibacterial coatings, the user control of NIR-irradiated rapid photothermal destruction of surface bacteria holds increasing attention beyond the traditional boundaries of typical antibacterial surfaces.


Chemistry-an Asian Journal | 2014

Photo- and pH-Tunable Multicolor Fluorescent Nanoparticle-Based Spiropyran- and BODIPY-Conjugated Polymer with Graphene Oxide

Shazid Md. Sharker; Chan Jin Jeong; Sung Min Kim; Jung Eun Lee; Ji Hoon Jeong; Insik In; Haeshin Lee; Sung Young Park

We report a stimuli-responsive fluorescent nanomaterial, based on graphene oxide coupled with a polymer conjugated with photochromic spiropyran (SP) dye and hydrophobic boron dipyrromethane (BODIPY) dye, for application in triggered target multicolor bioimaging. Graphene oxide (GO) was reduced by catechol-conjugated polymers under mildly alkaline conditions, which enabled to formation of functionalized multicolor graphene nanoparticles that can be induced by irradiation with UV light and by changing the pH from acidic to neutral. Investigation of these nanoparticles by using AFM, fluorescence emission, and in vitro cell and in vivo imaging revealed that they show different tunable colors in bioimaging applications and, more specifically, in cancer-cell detection. The stability, biocompatibility, and quenching efficacy of this nanocomposite open a different perspective for cell imaging in different independent colors, sequentially and simultaneously.


Luminescence | 2016

Concentration‐mediated multicolor fluorescence polymer carbon dots

Chan Jin Jeong; Gibaek Lee; Insik In; Sung Young Park

Polymer dots (PDs) showing concentration-mediated multicolor fluorescence were first prepared from sulfuric acid-treated dehydration of Pluronic® F-127 in a single step. Pluronic-based PDs (P-PDs) showed high dispersion stability in solvent media and exhibited a fluorescence emission that was widely tunable from red to blue by adjusting both the excitation wavelengths and the P-PD concentration in an aqueous solution. This unique fluorescence behavior of P-PDs might be a result of cross-talk in the fluorophores of the poly(propylene glycol)-rich core inside the P-PD through either energy transfer or charge transfer. Reconstruction of the surface energy traps of the P-PDs mediated through aggregation may lead to a new generation of carbon-based nanomaterials possessing a fluorescence emission and tunable by adjusting the concentration. These structures may be useful in the design of multifunctional carbon nanomaterials with tunable emission properties according to a variety of internal or external stimuli.


Nanoscale | 2014

Fluorescent carbon nanoparticles derived from natural materials of mango fruit for bio-imaging probes

Chan Jin Jeong; Arup Kumer Roy; Sung Han Kim; Jung Eun Lee; Ji Hoon Jeong; Insik In; Sung Young Park


Surface and Interface Analysis | 2015

Synthesis and antibacterial activity of versatile substrate‐coated biocidal material via catechol chemistry

Yeon Jeong Oh; Chan Jin Jeong; Shazid Md. Sharker; So Yeong Lee; Insik In; Sung Young Park


Chemistry Letters | 2013

Mussel-inspired Engineering of an Anodized Aluminum Oxide Membrane

So Yeon Kim; Mi Yeon Lee; Jung Yup Lee; Young Ho Park; Hyun Gu Kim; Chan Jin Jeong; Tamim Mosaiab; Byoungnam Park; Sung Young Park; Insik In


Nanoscale | 2017

Phenolic condensation and facilitation of fluorescent carbon dot formation: a mechanism study

Kyueui Lee; Eunsook Park; Haesung A. Lee; Caroline Sugnaux; Mikyung Shin; Chan Jin Jeong; Jeehee Lee; Phillip B. Messersmith; Sung Young Park; Haeshin Lee


Polymer Engineering and Science | 2015

Preparation of exfoliated montmorillonite nanocomposites with catechol/zwitterionic quaternized polymer for an antifouling coating

Chan Jin Jeong; Eun Bi Kang; Soo Jung Park; Kyung Ho Choi; Gyojic Shin; Insik In; Sung Young Park

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Sung Young Park

Korea National University of Transportation

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Insik In

Korea National University of Transportation

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Eun Bi Kang

Korea National University of Transportation

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Jung Eun Lee

Sungkyunkwan University

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Sung Han Kim

Korea National University of Transportation

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Sung Min Kim

Korea National University of Transportation

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