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Dive into the research topics where Han-Saem Park is active.

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Featured researches published by Han-Saem Park.


Scientific Reports | 2013

Redox-active charge carriers of conducting polymers as a tuner of conductivity and its potential window

Han-Saem Park; Seo-Jin Ko; Jeong-Seok Park; Jin Young Kim; Hyun-Kon Song

Electric conductivity of conducting polymers has been steadily enhanced towards a level worthy of being called its alias, “synthetic metal”. PEDOT:PSS (poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene) doped with poly(styrene sulfonate)), as a representative conducting polymer, recently reached around 3,000 S cm−1, the value to open the possibility to replace transparent conductive oxides. The leading strategy to drive the conductivity increase is solvent annealing in which aqueous solution of PEDOT:PSS is treated with an assistant solvent such as DMSO (dimethyl sulfoxide). In addition to the conductivity enhancement, we found that the potential range in which PEDOT:PSS is conductive is tuned wider into a negative potential direction by the DMSO-annealing. Also, the increase in a redox-active fraction of charge carriers is proposed to be responsible for the enhancement of conductivity in the solvent annealing process.


Angewandte Chemie | 2014

Doubling the Capacity of Lithium Manganese Oxide Spinel by a Flexible Skinny Graphitic Layer

Hyun Kuk Noh; Han-Saem Park; Hu Young Jeong; Sang Uck Lee; Hyun-Kon Song

By coating nanoparticular lithium manganese oxide (LMO) spinel with a few layers of graphitic basal planes, the capacity of the material reached up to 220 mA h g(-1) at a cutoff voltage of 2.5 V. The graphitic layers 1) provided a facile electron-transfer highway without hindering ion access and, more interestingly, 2) stabilized the structural distortion at the 3 V region reaction. The gain was won by a simple method in which microsized LMO was ball-milled in the presence of graphite with high energy. Vibratory ball milling pulverized the LMO into the nanoscale, exfoliated graphite of less than 10 layers and combined them together with an extremely intimate contact. Ab initio calculations show that the intrinsically very low electrical conductivity of the tetragonal phase of the LMO is responsible for the poor electrochemical performance in the 3 V region and could be overcome by the graphitic skin strategy proposed.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2014

Conducting Polymer-Skinned Electroactive Materials of Lithium-Ion Batteries: Ready for Monocomponent Electrodes without Additional Binders and Conductive Agents

Ju-Myung Kim; Han-Saem Park; Jang-Hoon Park; Tae-Hee Kim; Hyun-Kon Song; Sang-Young Lee

Rapid growth of mobile and even wearable electronics is in pursuit of high-energy-density lithium-ion batteries. One simple and facile way to achieve this goal is the elimination of nonelectroactive components of electrodes such as binders and conductive agents. Here, we present a new concept of monocomponent electrodes comprising solely electroactive materials that are wrapped with an insignificant amount (less than 0.4 wt %) of conducting polymer (PEDOT:PSS or poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene) doped with poly(styrenesulfonate)). The PEDOT:PSS as an ultraskinny surface layer on electroactive materials (LiCoO2 (LCO) powders are chosen as a model system to explore feasibility of this new concept) successfully acts as a kind of binder as well as mixed (both electrically and ionically) conductive film, playing a key role in enabling the monocomponent electrode. The electric conductivity of the monocomponent LCO cathode is controlled by simply varying the PSS content and also the structural conformation (benzoid-favoring coil structure and quinoid-favoring linear or extended coil structure) of PEDOT in the PEDOT:PSS skin. Notably, a substantial increase in the mass-loading density of the LCO cathode is realized with the PEDOT:PSS skin without sacrificing electronic/ionic transport pathways. We envisage that the PEDOT:PSS-skinned electrode strategy opens a scalable and versatile route for making practically meaningful binder-/conductive agent-free (monocomponent) electrodes.


Angewandte Chemie | 2015

Conductivity-Dependent Completion of Oxygen Reduction on Oxide Catalysts

Dong-Gyu Lee; Ohhun Gwon; Han-Saem Park; Su Hwan Kim; Juchan Yang; Sang Kyu Kwak; Guntae Kim; Hyun-Kon Song

The electric conductivity-dependence of the number of electrons transferred during the oxygen reduction reaction is presented. Intensive properties, such as the number of electrons transferred, are difficult to be considered conductivity-dependent. Four different perovskite oxide catalysts of different conductivities were investigated with varying carbon contents. More conductive environments surrounding active sites, achieved by more conductive catalysts (providing internal electric pathways) or higher carbon content (providing external electric pathways), resulted in higher number of electrons transferred toward more complete 4e reduction of oxygen, and also changed the rate-determining steps from two-step 2e process to a single-step 1e process. Experimental evidence of the conductivity dependency was described by a microscopic ohmic polarization model based on effective potential localized nearby the active sites.


ACS Nano | 2012

Edge-exfoliated graphites for facile kinetics of delithiation.

Jeong-Seok Park; Myeong-Hee Lee; In-Yup Jeon; Han-Saem Park; Jong-Beom Baek; Hyun-Kon Song

As high rate charge and discharge characteristics of energy storage devices become more important with the market of electric vehicles intensively growing, the kinetics of lithiation or delithiation of electrode materials for lithium ion batteries require enhancement. Graphites, the most widely used anode materials, have a limited power density at high discharge rates, while their alternatives, such as silicon and transition metal oxides, show even inferior rate capability. This work was motivated from an idea of what if the edge opening of graphite was zipped more open to lithium ions in the electrolyte. By edge-selective functionalization, the peripheral d-spacing of graphite (d(0)) was locally controlled. Larger values of d(0) led to higher capacity especially at high discharge rates. Around 2-fold enhancement of capacity or energy density was achieved at 50C discharge rate from 110 to 190 mAh g(-1) by exfoliating graphite locally in its edge region. Also, the d(0) dependency of delithiation kinetics confirmed that the electrochemical step of Li(+) influx into or efflux out of the interlayer space of graphite is possibly the rate-determining step of lithiation or delithiation.


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2012

Catalytic carbonization of an uncarbonizable precursor by transition metals in olivine cathode materials of lithium ion batteries

Han-Saem Park; Tae-Hee Kim; Myeong-Hee Lee; Hyun-Kon Song

Herein, we report on catalytic effects of transition metals (Me) in phospho-olivines (LiMePO4) on carbonization of cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB). Carbon coating is the required process to enhance electronic conductivity of phospho-olivines that are used as cathode materials for lithium ion batteries. Primary particles of phospho-olivines were in situ coated with CTAB and the adsorbed carbon precursor was carbonized to provide an electrically conductive pathway. CTAB was successfully carbonized in a significant amount with Fe in phospho-olivines (LiFexMn1−xPO4 with x = 1 and 0.5) even if CTAB is thermally decomposed around 300 °C without any residual mass in the absence of the phospho-olivines. LiMnPO4 was the most inferior in terms of CTAB adsorption and thermal carbonization. LiNiPO4 and LiCoPO4 showed inefficient conversion of adsorbed CTAB to carbon even if their adsorption ability for CTAB is quite large. Also, the effect of the amount of carbon coating on LiFePO4 was investigated, leading to a conclusion that the carbon thickness balanced between electronic and ionic conductances results in the best electrochemical performances of lithium ion batteries specifically at high discharge rates.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2014

An inter-tangled network of redox-active and conducting polymers as a cathode for ultrafast rechargeable batteries

Ji-Eun Kim; Han-Saem Park; Tae-Hee Kim; Sung Yeol Kim; Hyun-Kon Song

A 1D organic redox-active material is combined with another 1D conductive material for rechargeable batteries. Poly(vinyl carbazole) (or PVK) and poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene) doped with poly(styrenesulfonate) (or PEDOT:PSS) are used as the redox-active and conductive 1D materials, respectively. Due to their extremely anisotropic geometry, the two polymers are expected to be inter-tangled with each other, showing a kinetically ideal model system in which each redox-active moiety of PVK is supposed to be directly connected with the conducting pathways of PEDOT:PSS. In addition to its role as a conductive agent providing kinetic benefits, PEDOT:PSS works as an efficient binder that guarantees enhanced electrochemical performances with only a tenth of the amount of a conventional binder (polyvinylidene fluoride or PVdF). The benefit of gravimetric energy density gain obtained using the conductive binder comes mainly from efficient spatial coverage of binding volume due to the low density of PEDOT:PSS. Towards realizing flexible all-polymer batteries, a quasi-all-polymer battery half-cell is designed using the PVK/PEDOT:PSS composite with a polymer gel electrolyte.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Bifunctional hydrous RuO 2 nanocluster electrocatalyst embedded in carbon matrix for efficient and durable operation of rechargeable zinc–air batteries

Han-Saem Park; Eunyong Seo; Juchan Yang; Yeongdae Lee; Byeong-Su Kim; Hyun-Kon Song

Ruthenium oxide (RuO2) is the best oxygen evolution reaction (OER) electrocatalyst. Herein, we demonstrated that RuO2 can be also efficiently used as an oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) electrocatalyst, thereby serving as a bifunctional material for rechargeable Zn–air batteries. We found two forms of RuO2 (i.e. hydrous and anhydrous, respectively h-RuO2 and ah-RuO2) to show different ORR and OER electrocatalytic characteristics. Thus, h-RuO2 required large ORR overpotentials, although it completed the ORR via a 4e process. In contrast, h-RuO2 triggered the OER at lower overpotentials at the expense of showing very unstable electrocatalytic activity. To capitalize on the advantages of h-RuO2 while improving its drawbacks, we designed a unique structure (RuO2@C) where h-RuO2 nanoparticles were embedded in a carbon matrix. A double hydrophilic block copolymer-templated ruthenium precursor was transformed into RuO2 nanoparticles upon formation of the carbon matrix via annealing. The carbon matrix allowed overcoming the limitations of h-RuO2 by improving its poor conductivity and protecting the catalyst from dissolution during OER. The bifunctional RuO2@C catalyst demonstrated a very low potential gap (ΔEOER-ORR = ca. 1.0 V) at 20 mA cm−2. The Zn||RuO2@C cell showed an excellent stability (i.e. no overpotential was observed after more than 40 h).


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2018

High-performance electrothermal and anticorrosive transparent heating stickers

Kangmin Lee; Jeonghwan Park; Hyungwoo Kim; Han-Saem Park; Hyun-Kon Song; Ka-Hyun Kim; Kwanyong Seo

In this study, the fabrication of a high-performance electrothermal and anticorrosive transparent heating sticker employing a novel Ni/Ag hybrid microgrid electrode is reported. The proposed sticker not only exhibits an excellent optoelectronic performance (a sheet resistance of 4.3 Ω sq−1 at a transmittance of 96%) but also has a uniform heat distribution over its entire area owing to the electrical uniformity of the honeycomb-structured microgrid electrode. The transparent heating sticker reveals outstanding thermal and chemical stability with no electrode damage even in harsh environments such as high temperatures (300 °C) and atmospheres containing sulfur in excess, due to the anti-corrosion properties of nickel (Ni). The transparent heating sticker also exhibits a high saturation temperature of over 100 °C even at a low operating voltage (5 V) because highly thermally/electrically conductive silver (Ag) is employed as a base electrode material underneath Ni. Furthermore, a successful defogging test is demonstrated with an automobile side-view mirror using the transparent heating sticker, confirming its practical applicability. Accordingly, the proposed transparent heating sticker presents a unique opportunity for developing transparent heaters with superior chemical stability and a high electrothermal performance.


Journal of Power Sources | 2012

Restricted growth of LiMnPO4 nanoparticles evolved from a precursor seed

Tae-Hee Kim; Han-Saem Park; Myeong-Hee Lee; Sang-Young Lee; Hyun-Kon Song

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Hyun-Kon Song

Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology

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Juchan Yang

Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology

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Myeong-Hee Lee

Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology

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Tae-Hee Kim

Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology

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Byeong-Su Kim

Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology

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Jeong-Seok Park

Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology

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Sang-Young Lee

Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology

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Yeongdae Lee

Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology

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Dong-Gyu Lee

Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology

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Eunyong Seo

Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology

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