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Dive into the research topics where Haksue Lee is active.

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Featured researches published by Haksue Lee.


Experimental and Molecular Medicine | 2011

Effects of combined mechanical stimulation on the proliferation and differentiation of pre-osteoblasts

Kyung Shin Kang; Seung-Jae Lee; Haksue Lee; Wonkyu Moon; Dong Woo Cho

We observed how combined mechanical stimuli affect the proliferation and differentiation of pre-osteoblasts. For this research, a bioreactor system was developed that can simultaneously stimulate cells with cyclic strain and ultrasound, each of which is known to effectively stimulate bone tissue regeneration. MC3T3-E1 pre-osteoblasts were chosen for bone tissue engineering due to their osteoblast-like characteristics. 3-D scaffolds were fabricated with polycaprolactone and poly-L-lactic acid using the salt leaching method. The cells were stimulated by the bioreactor with cyclic strain and ultrasound. The bioreactor was set at a frequency of 1.0 Hz and 10% strain for cyclic strain and 1.0 MHz and 30 mW/cm2 for ultrasound. Three experimental groups (ultrasound, cyclic strain, and combined stimulation) and a control group were examined. Each group was stimulated for 20 min/day. Mechanical stimuli did not affect MC3T3-E1 cell proliferation significantly up to 10 days when measured with the cell counting kit-8. However, gene expression analysis of collagen type-I, osteocalcin, RUNX2, and osterix revealed that the combined mechanical stimulation accelerated the matrix maturation of MC3T3-E1 cells. These results indicate that the combined mechanical stimulation can enhance the differentiation of pre-osteoblasts more efficiently than simple stimuli, in spite of no effect on cell proliferation.


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2009

Ultrasonic transducer for ranging measurement with high directionality using parametric transmitting array in air and a method for manufacturing same

Wonkyu Moon; Haksue Lee

A multiple resonances type ultrasonic transducer for a ranging measurement with high directionality using a parametric transmitting array in air, includes an ultrasonic actuator unit formed with a regularly mixing array of first unit actuators having a resonance frequency of f1 and second unit actuators having a resonance frequency of f2. The ultrasonic actuator unit generates a difference frequency wave (fd=f1−f2) with high directionality by forming a parametric transmitting array in air through generating two ultrasonic waves with high pressure in air. Further, the transducer includes an ultrasonic sensor unit formed with one or more unit sensors having a resonance frequency of the difference frequency (fd=f1−f2), for sensing a reflected ultrasonic pulsesignal from a target.


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2004

Effects of mutual impedance on the radiation characteristics of transducer arrays

Haksue Lee; Jinhee Tak; Wonkyu Moon; Geunbae Lim

The mutual resistance of transducer arrays is investigated in order to design arrays with improved performance for high intensity sounds at a given frequency. This work proposes the theory that the mutual resistance is related to the loading effects of pressure waves propagated from a piston driver on the surface of another driver. Using this interpretation, the important characteristics of the mutual resistance of two piston drivers are explained and the conditions for local maxima in the mutual resistance are easily determined. On the basis of analyses of the interactions between a driver and acoustic pressure waves, we propose a method to determine the driver radius and the distance between two drivers that give maximum mutual radiation resistance. To evaluate the proposed method, the total resistance of a transducer array is calculated using the formulas for mutual and self-resistance established by Pritchard. The results of the calculations of the total resistances of arrays with many drivers show that a transducer array with drivers arranged sparsely can achieve a larger value of the radiation power per unit area as well as better radiation efficiency than an array in which the drivers are in a closely packed arrangement at a given frequency.


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2009

A micro-machined source transducer for a parametric array in air.

Haksue Lee; Daesil Kang; Wonkyu Moon

Parametric array applications in air, such as highly directional parametric loudspeaker systems, usually rely on large radiators to generate the high-intensity primary beams required for nonlinear interactions. However, a conventional transducer, as a primary wave projector, requires a great deal of electrical power because its electroacoustic efficiency is very low due to the large characteristic mechanical impedance in air. The feasibility of a micro-machined ultrasonic transducer as an efficient finite-amplitude wave projector was studied. A piezoelectric micro-machined ultrasonic transducer array consisting of lead zirconate titanate uni-morph elements was designed and fabricated for this purpose. Theoretical and experimental evaluations showed that a micro-machined ultrasonic transducer array can be used as an efficient source transducer for a parametric array in air. The beam patterns and propagation curves of the difference frequency wave and the primary wave generated by the micro-machined ultrasonic transducer array were measured. Although the theoretical results were based on ideal parametric array models, the theoretical data explained the experimental results reasonably well. These experiments demonstrated the potential of micro-machined primary wave projector.


Ultrasonics | 2010

Design of an ultrasonic sensor for measuring distance and detecting obstacles.

Jongkyu Park; Yub Je; Haksue Lee; Wonkyu Moon

This paper introduces a novel method for designing the transducer of a highly directional ultrasonic range sensor for detecting obstacles in mobile robot applications. The transducer consists of wave generation, amplification, and radiation sections, and a countermass. The operating principle of this design is based on the parametric array method where the frequency difference between two ultrasonic waves is used to generate a highly directional low-frequency wave with a small aperture. The aim of this study was to design an optimal transducer to generate the two simultaneous longitudinal modes efficiently. We first derived an appropriate mathematical model by combining the continuum model of a bar and countermass with the compatibility condition between a piezoelectric actuator and a linear horn. Then we determined the optimal length of the aluminum horn and the piezoelectric actuator using a finite element method. The proposed sensor exhibited a half-power bandwidth of less than+/-1.3 degrees at 44.8 kHz, a much higher directivity than existing conventional ultrasonic range sensors.


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2010

A stepped-plate bi-frequency source for generating a difference frequency sound with a parametric arraya)

Yub Je; Haksue Lee; Jong-Kyu Park; Wonkyu Moon

An ultrasonic radiator is developed to generate a difference frequency sound from two frequencies of ultrasound in air with a parametric array. A design method is proposed for an ultrasonic radiator capable of generating highly directive, high-amplitude ultrasonic sound beams at two different frequencies in air based on a modification of the stepped-plate ultrasonic radiator. The stepped-plate ultrasonic radiator was introduced by Gallego-Juarez et al. [Ultrasonics 16, 267-271 (1978)] in their previous study and can effectively generate highly directive, large-amplitude ultrasonic sounds in air, but only at a single frequency. Because parametric array sources must be able to generate sounds at more than one frequency, a design modification is crucial to the application of a stepped-plate ultrasonic radiator as a parametric array source in air. The aforementioned method was employed to design a parametric radiator for use in air. A prototype of this design was constructed and tested to determine whether it could successfully generate a difference frequency sound with a parametric array. The results confirmed that the proposed single small-area transducer was suitable as a parametric radiator in air.


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2010

A micro-machined piezoelectric flexural-mode hydrophone with air backing: Benefit of air backing for enhancing sensitivity

Haksue Lee; Sungjoon Choi; Wonkyu Moon

A micro-machined underwater acoustic receiver that utilizes the flexural vibration mode of a silicon thin plate and piezoelectric transduction material was investigated. In particular, air was used as the backing material for the hydrophone in order to improve sensitivity in the audible frequency range. To evaluate the effects of air backing on receiving sensitivity, a transduction model incorporating mechanical/electrical/acoustical design parameters was used in designing a piezoelectric micro-machined hydrophone. The sensitivity and displacement responses of the sensor were simulated using the model for air backing and water backing cases, and the benefit of using air backing to enhance sensitivity was confirmed. The micro-machined piezoelectric transducer was fabricated, assembled in the shape of a hydrophone, and tested to ascertain its characteristics as an underwater sensor. These characteristics, such as frequency response and sensitivity, were measured and compared with the simulated results.


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2015

A micromachined efficient parametric array loudspeaker with a wide radiation frequency banda)

Yub Je; Haksue Lee; Kyounghun Been; Wonkyu Moon

Parametric array (PA) loudspeakers generate directional audible sound via the PA effect, which can make private listening possible. The practical applications of PA loudspeakers include information technology devices that require large power efficiency transducers with a wide frequency bandwidth. Piezoelectric micromachined ultrasonic transducers (PMUTs) are compact and efficient units for PA sources [Je, Lee, and Moon, Ultrasonics 53, 1124-1134 (2013)]. This study investigated the use of an array of PMUTs to make a PA loudspeaker with high power efficiency and wide bandwidth. The achievable maximum radiation bandwidth of the driver was calculated, and an array of PMUTs with two distinct resonance frequencies (f1 = 100 kHz, f2 = 110 kHz) was designed. Out-of-phase driving was used with the dual-resonance transducer array to increase the bandwidth. The fabricated PMUT array exhibited an efficiency of up to 71%, together with a ±3-dB bandwidth of 17 kHz for directly radiated primary waves, and 19.5 kHz (500 Hz to 20 kHz) for the difference frequency waves (with equalization).


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2010

A micro-machined piezoelectric flexural-mode hydrophone with air backing: A hydrostatic pressure-balancing mechanism for integrity preservation

Sungjoon Choi; Haksue Lee; Wonkyu Moon

Although an air-backed thin plate is an effective sound receiver structure, it is easily damaged via pressure unbalance caused by external hydrostatic pressure. To overcome this difficulty, a simple pressure-balancing module is proposed. Despite its small size and relative simplicity, with proper design and operation, micro-channel structure provides a solution to the pressure-balancing problem. If the channel size is sufficiently small, the gas-liquid interface may move back and forth without breach by the hydrostatic pressure since the surface tension can retain the interface surface continuously. One input port of the device is opened to an intermediate liquid, while the other port is connected to the air-backing chamber. As the hydrostatic pressure increases, the liquid in the micro-channel compresses the air, and the pressure in the backing chamber is then equalized to match the external hydrostatic pressure. To validate the performance of the proposed mechanism, a micro-channel prototype is designed and integrated with the piezoelectric micro-machined flexural sensor developed in our previous work. The working principle of the mechanism is experimentally verified. In addition, the effect of hydrostatic pressure on receiving sensitivity is evaluated and compared with predicted behavior.


TRANSDUCERS 2007 - 2007 International Solid-State Sensors, Actuators and Microsystems Conference | 2007

Design and Fabrication of the High Directional Ultrasonic Ranging Sensor to Enhance the Spatial Resolution

Haksue Lee; Daesil Kang; Wonkyu Moon

A new ultrasonic ranging transducer with high directionality is developed to enhance the spatial resolution in the pulse-echo measurement in air. The concept of the parametric transmitting array is applied to the design. A high-performance piezoelectric micro-machined ultrasonic transducer (pMUT) array is designed and fabricated in this study. The indirectly generated pulse has a beam-width of around 5deg and a sound pressure level (SPL) of over 85 dB at the peak. For a practical application, the higher sound pressure level should be achieved.

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Wonkyu Moon

Pohang University of Science and Technology

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Yub Je

Pohang University of Science and Technology

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Kyounghun Been

Pohang University of Science and Technology

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Sungjoon Choi

Pohang University of Science and Technology

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Daesil Kang

Pohang University of Science and Technology

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Dong Hoon Yi

Pohang University of Science and Technology

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Hee-Seon Seo

Agency for Defense Development

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In-Dong Kim

Pukyong National University

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Jong-Kyu Park

Pohang University of Science and Technology

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Kumjae Shin

Pohang University of Science and Technology

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