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Dive into the research topics where ChangKyu Yoon is active.

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Featured researches published by ChangKyu Yoon.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2015

Self-folding thermo-magnetically responsive soft microgrippers.

Joyce C. Breger; ChangKyu Yoon; Rui Ping Xiao; Hye Rin Kwag; Martha O. Wang; John Fisher; Thao D. Nguyen; David H. Gracias

Hydrogels such as poly(N-isopropylacrylamide-co-acrylic acid) (pNIPAM-AAc) can be photopatterned to create a wide range of actuatable and self-folding microstructures. Mechanical motion is derived from the large and reversible swelling response of this cross-linked hydrogel in varying thermal or pH environments. This action is facilitated by their network structure and capacity for large strain. However, due to the low modulus of such hydrogels, they have limited gripping ability of relevance to surgical excision or robotic tasks such as pick-and-place. Using experiments and modeling, we design, fabricate, and characterize photopatterned, self-folding functional microgrippers that combine a swellable, photo-cross-linked pNIPAM-AAc soft-hydrogel with a nonswellable and stiff segmented polymer (polypropylene fumarate, PPF). We also show that we can embed iron oxide (Fe2O3) nanoparticles into the porous hydrogel layer, allowing the microgrippers to be responsive and remotely guided using magnetic fields. Using finite element models, we investigate the influence of the thickness and the modulus of both the hydrogel and stiff polymer layers on the self-folding characteristics of the microgrippers. Finally, we illustrate operation and functionality of these polymeric microgrippers for soft robotic and surgical applications.


Smart Materials and Structures | 2014

Functional stimuli responsive hydrogel devices by self-folding

ChangKyu Yoon; Rui Xiao; Jaehyun Park; Jaepyeong Cha; Thao D. Nguyen; David H. Gracias

We describe a photolithographic approach to create functional stimuli responsive, self-folding, microscale hydrogel devices using thin, gradient cross-linked hinges and thick, fully cross-linked panels. The hydrogels are composed of poly (N-isopropylacrylamide-co-acrylic acid) (pNIPAM-AAc) with reversible stimuli responsive properties just below physiological temperatures. We show that a variety of three-dimensional structures can be formed and reversibly actuated by temperature or pH. We experimentally characterized the swelling and mechanical properties of pNIPAM-AAc and developed a finite element model to rationalize self-folding and its variation with hinge thickness and swelling ratio. Finally, we highlight applications of this approach in the creation of functional devices such as self-folding polymeric micro-capsules, untethered micro-grippers and thermally steered micro-mirror systems.


Science | 2017

DNA sequence-directed shape change of photopatterned hydrogels via high-degree swelling.

Angelo Cangialosi; ChangKyu Yoon; Jiayu Liu; Qi Huang; Jingkai Guo; Thao D. Nguyen; David H. Gracias; Rebecca Schulman

DNA molecules direct the swelling of cross-linked hydrogels with shape changes in response to different biomolecular signals. Getting a hold with DNA Stimuli-responsive materials can respond to physical or chemical cues to trigger changes in color, shape, or other properties. Cangialosi et al. used photolithography to define multilayer planar soft machines from polyacrylamide coupled to single strands of DNA. When presented with the complementary strands, the machines can change shape in complicated and programmable ways, including stepwise or sequential shape changes. Science, this issue p. 1126 Shape-changing hydrogels that can bend, twist, or actuate in response to external stimuli are critical to soft robots, programmable matter, and smart medicine. Shape change in hydrogels has been induced by global cues, including temperature, light, or pH. Here we demonstrate that specific DNA molecules can induce 100-fold volumetric hydrogel expansion by successive extension of cross-links. We photopattern up to centimeter-sized gels containing multiple domains that undergo different shape changes in response to different DNA sequences. Experiments and simulations suggest a simple design rule for controlled shape change. Because DNA molecules can be coupled to molecular sensors, amplifiers, and logic circuits, this strategy introduces the possibility of building soft devices that respond to diverse biochemical inputs and autonomously implement chemical control programs.


Applied Physics Letters | 2015

Self-folding graphene-polymer bilayers

Tao Deng; ChangKyu Yoon; Qianru Jin; Mingen Li; Zewen Liu; David H. Gracias

In order to incorporate the extraordinary intrinsic thermal, electrical, mechanical, and optical properties of graphene with three dimensional (3D) flexible substrates, we introduce a solvent-driven self-folding approach using graphene-polymer bilayers. A polymer (SU-8) film was spin coated atop chemically vapor deposited graphene films on wafer substrates and graphene-polymer bilayers were patterned with or without metal electrodes using photolithography, thin film deposition, and etching. After patterning, the bilayers were released from the substrates and they self-folded to form fully integrated, curved, and folded structures. In contrast to planar graphene sensors on rigid substrates, we assembled curved and folded sensors that are flexible and they feature smaller form factors due to their 3D geometry and large surface areas due to their multiple rolled architectures. We believe that this approach could be used to assemble a range of high performance 3D electronic and optical devices of relevance to sensing, diagnostics, wearables, and energy harvesting.


Frontiers in Mechanical Engineering | 2017

Stimuli-Responsive Soft Untethered Grippers for Drug Delivery and Robotic Surgery

Arijit Ghosh; ChangKyu Yoon; Federico Ongaro; Stefano Scheggi; Florin M. Selaru; Sarthak Misra; David H. Gracias

Untethered microtools that can be precisely navigated into deep in vivo locations are important for clinical procedures pertinent to minimally invasive surgery and targeted drug delivery. In this mini-review, untethered soft grippers are discussed, with an emphasis on a class of autonomous stimuli-responsive gripping soft tools that can be used to excise tissues and release drugs in a controlled manner. The grippers are composed of polymers and hydrogels and are thus compliant to soft tissues. They can be navigated using magnetic fields and controlled by robotic path-planning strategies to carry out tasks like pick-and-place of microspheres and biological materials either with user assistance, or in a fully autonomous manner. It is envisioned that the use of these untethered soft grippers will translate from laboratory experiments to clinical scenarios and the challenges that need to be overcome to make this transition are discussed.


Journal of Micro-Bio Robotics | 2017

Autonomous planning and control of soft untethered grippers in unstructured environments

Federico Ongaro; Stefano Scheggi; ChangKyu Yoon; Frank van den Brink; Seung Hyun Oh; David H. Gracias; Sarthak Misra

The use of small, maneuverable, untethered and reconfigurable robots could provide numerous advantages in various micromanipulation tasks. Examples include microassembly, pick-and-place of fragile micro-objects for lab-on-a-chip applications, assisted hatching for in-vitro fertilization and minimally invasive surgery. This study assesses the potential of soft untethered magnetic grippers as alternatives or complements to conventional tethered or rigid micromanipulators. We demonstrate closed-loop control of untethered grippers and automated pick-and-place of biological material on porcine tissue in an unstructured environment. We also demonstrate the ability of the soft grippers to recognize and sort non-biological micro-scale objects. The fully autonomous nature of the experiments is made possible by the integration of planning and decision-making algorithms, as well as by closed-loop temperature and electromagnetic motion control. The grippers are capable of completing pick-and-place tasks of biological material at an average velocity of 1.8 ±0.71 mm/s and a drop-off error of 0.62 ±0.22 mm. Color-sensitive sorting of three micro-scale objects is completed at a velocity of 1.21 ±0.68 mm/s and a drop-off error of 0.85 ±0.41 mm. Our findings suggest that improved autonomous untethered grippers could augment the capabilities of current soft-robotic instruments especially in advancedtasks involving manipulation.


ieee international conference on biomedical robotics and biomechatronics | 2016

Control of untethered soft grippers for pick-and-place tasks

Federico Ongaro; ChangKyu Yoon; Frank van den Brink; Momen Abayazid; Seung Hyun Oh; David H. Gracias; Sarthak Misra

In order to handle complex tasks in hard-to-reach environments, small-scale robots have to possess suitable dexterous and untethered control capabilities. The fabrication and manipulation of soft, small-scale grippers complying to these requirements is now made possible by advances in material science and robotics. In this paper, we use soft, small-scale grippers to demonstrate pick-and-place tasks. The precise remote control is obtained by altering both the magnetic field gradient and the temperature in the workspace. This allows us to regulate the position and grasping configuration of the soft thermally-responsive hydrogel-nanoparticle composite magnetic grippers. The magnetic closed-loop control achieves precise localization with an average region-of-convergence of the gripper of 0.12±0.05 mm. The micro-sized payload can be placed with a positioning error of 0.57±0.33 mm. The soft grippers move with an average velocity of 0.72±0.13 mm/s without a micro-sized payload, and at 1.09±0.07 mm/s with a micro-sized payload.


ieee international conference on biomedical robotics and biomechatronics | 2016

Evaluation of an electromagnetic system with haptic feedback for control of untethered, soft grippers affected by disturbances

Federico Ongaro; Claudio Pacchierotti; ChangKyu Yoon; Domenico Prattichizzo; David H. Gracias; Sarthak Misra

Current wireless, small-scale robots have restricted manipulation capabilities, and limited intuitive tools to control their motion. This paper presents a novel teleoperation system with haptic feedback for the control of untethered soft grippers. The system is able to move and open/close the grippers by regulating the magnetic field and temperature in the workspace. Users can intuitively control the grippers using a grounded haptic interface, that is also capable of providing compelling force feedback information as the gripper interacts with the environment. The magnetic closed-loop control algorithm is designed starting from a Finite Element Model analysis. The electromagnetic model used is validated by a measurement of the magnetic field with a resolution of 0.1 mT and sampling rate of 6.8×106 samples/m2. The system shows an accuracy in positioning the gripper of 0.08 mm at a velocity of 0.81 mm/s. The robustness of the control and tracking algorithms are tested by spraying the workspace with water drops that cause glares and related disturbances of up to 0.41 mm.


IEEE Transactions on Automation Science and Engineering | 2018

Steering and Control of Miniaturized Untethered Soft Magnetic Grippers With Haptic Assistance

Claudio Pacchierotti; Federico Ongaro; Frank van den Brink; ChangKyu Yoon; Domenico Prattichizzo; David H. Gracias; Sarthak Misra

Untethered miniature robotics have recently shown promising results in several scenarios at the microscale, such as targeted drug delivery, microassembly, and biopsy procedures. However, the vast majority of these small-scale robots have very limited manipulation capabilities, and none of the steering systems currently available enables humans to intuitively and effectively control dexterous miniaturized robots in a remote environment. In this paper, we present an innovative microteleoperation system with haptic assistance for the intuitive steering and control of miniaturized self-folding soft magnetic grippers in 2-D space. The soft grippers can be wirelessly positioned using weak magnetic fields and opened/closed by changing their temperature. An image-guided algorithm tracks the position of the controlled miniaturized gripper in the remote environment. A haptic interface provides the human operator with compelling haptic sensations about the interaction between the gripper and the environment as well as enables the operator to intuitively control the target position and grasping configuration of the gripper. Finally, magnetic and thermal control systems regulate the position and grasping configuration of the gripper. The viability of the proposed approach is demonstrated through two experiments involving 26 human subjects. Providing haptic stimuli elicited statistically significant improvements in the performance of the considered navigation and micromanipulation tasks.Note to Practitioners—The ability to accurately and intuitively control the motion of miniaturized grippers in remote environments can open new exciting possibilities in the fields of minimally invasive surgery, micromanipulation, biopsy, and drug delivery. This paper presents a microteleoperation system with haptic assistance through which a clinician can easily control the motion and open/close capability of miniaturized wireless soft grippers. It introduces the underlying autonomous magnetic and thermal control systems, their interconnection with the master haptic interface, and an extensive evaluation in two real-world scenarios: 1) following of a predetermined trajectory and 2) pick-and-place task of a microscopic object.


Macromolecular Rapid Communications | 2018

Multitemperature Responsive Self-Folding Soft Biomimetic Structures

Kunihiko Kobayashi; Seung Hyun Oh; ChangKyu Yoon; David H. Gracias

Untethered, millimeter-scale, stimuli-responsive shape change structures are critical to the function of autonomous devices, smart materials, and soft robotics. Temperature in a range compatible with physiological or ambient environmental conditions is an excellent cue to trigger actuation of soft structures for practical biomimetic applications. Previously, a range of thermally responsive self-folding soft structures has been described and utilized in a variety of applications from tissue engineering to minimally invasive surgery. In order to extend these concepts to more complex devices, thermally responsive bilayer structures composed of poly[oligo (ethylene glycol) methyl ether methacrylate] (POEGMA) gels that swell at three different temperatures are described. The lower critical solution temperature and volume transition temperature of POEGMA are tuned by varying the side chain length and the extent of copolymerization. The swelling properties of the POEGMA gels are characterized and a multilayer photopatterning process is described that is used to create soft biomimetic structures that change shape in a sequential manner while displaying multistate behaviors.

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Thao D. Nguyen

Johns Hopkins University

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Jiayu Liu

Johns Hopkins University

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Jingkai Guo

Johns Hopkins University

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Seung Hyun Oh

Johns Hopkins University

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