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Dive into the research topics where Jaeeun Yu is active.

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Featured researches published by Jaeeun Yu.


Advanced Materials | 2014

Epitaxial growth of molecular crystals on van der Waals substrates for high-performance organic electronics

Chul Ho Lee; Theanne Schiros; Elton J. G. Santos; Bumjung Kim; Kevin G. Yager; Seok Ju Kang; Sunwoo Lee; Jaeeun Yu; Kenji Watanabe; Takashi Taniguchi; James Hone; Efthimios Kaxiras; Colin Nuckolls; Philip Kim

Epitaxial van der Waals (vdW) heterostructures of organic and layered materials are demonstrated to create high-performance organic electronic devices. High-quality rubrene films with large single-crystalline domains are grown on h-BN dielectric layers via vdW epitaxy. In addition, high carrier mobility comparable to free-standing single-crystal counterparts is achieved by forming interfacial electrical contacts with graphene electrodes.


Nature Communications | 2017

Coulomb engineering of the bandgap and excitons in two-dimensional materials

Archana Raja; Andrey Chaves; Jaeeun Yu; Ghidewon Arefe; Heather M. Hill; Albert F. Rigosi; Timothy C. Berkelbach; Philipp Nagler; Christian Schüller; Tobias Korn; Colin Nuckolls; James Hone; Louis E. Brus; Tony F. Heinz; David R. Reichman; Alexey Chernikov

The ability to control the size of the electronic bandgap is an integral part of solid-state technology. Atomically thin two-dimensional crystals offer a new approach for tuning the energies of the electronic states based on the unusual strength of the Coulomb interaction in these materials and its environmental sensitivity. Here, we show that by engineering the surrounding dielectric environment, one can tune the electronic bandgap and the exciton binding energy in monolayers of WS2 and WSe2 by hundreds of meV. We exploit this behaviour to present an in-plane dielectric heterostructure with a spatially dependent bandgap, as an initial step towards the creation of diverse lateral junctions with nanoscale resolution.


Biosensors and Bioelectronics | 2015

An aptameric graphene nanosensor for label-free detection of small-molecule biomarkers.

Cheng Wang; Jinho Kim; Yibo Zhu; Jaeyoung Yang; Gwan Hyoung Lee; Sunwoo Lee; Jaeeun Yu; Renjun Pei; Guohua Liu; Colin Nuckolls; James Hone; Qiao Lin

This paper presents an aptameric graphene nanosensor for detection of small-molecule biomarkers. To address difficulties in direct detection of small molecules associated with their low molecular weight and electrical charge, we incorporate an aptamer-based competitive affinity assay in a graphene field effect transistor (FET), and demonstrate the utility of the nanosensor with dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (DHEA-S), a small-molecule steroid hormone, as the target analyte. In the competitive affinity assay, DHEA-S specifically binds to aptamer molecules pre-hybridized to their complementary DNA anchor molecules immobilized on the graphene surface. This results in the competitive release of the strongly charged aptamer from the DNA anchor and hence a change in electrical properties of the graphene, which can be measured to achieve the detection of DHEA-S. We present experimental data on the label-free, specific and quantitative detection of DHEA-S at clinically appropriate concentrations with an estimated detection limit of 44.7 nM, and analyze the trend observed in the experiments using molecular binding kinetics theory. These results demonstrate the potential of our nanosensor in the detection of DHEA-S and other small molecules in biomedical applications.


Nano Letters | 2016

Patterning Superatom Dopants on Transition Metal Dichalcogenides

Jaeeun Yu; Chul Ho Lee; Delphine Bouilly; Minyong Han; Philip Kim; Michael L. Steigerwald; Xavier Roy; Colin Nuckolls

This study describes a new and simple approach to dope two-dimensional transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDCs) using the superatom Co6Se8(PEt3)6 as the electron dopant. Semiconducting TMDCs are wired into field-effect transistor devices and then immersed into a solution of these superatoms. The degree of doping is determined by the concentration of the superatoms in solution and by the length of time the films are immersed in the dopant solution. Using this chemical approach, we are able to turn mono- and few-layer MoS2 samples from moderately to heavily electron-doped states. The same approach applied on WSe2 films changes their characteristics from hole transporting to electron transporting. Moreover, we show that the superatom doping can be patterned on specific areas of TMDC films. To illustrate the power of this technique, we demonstrate the fabrication of a lateral p-n junction by selectively doping only a portion of the channel in a WSe2 device. Finally, encapsulation of the doped films with crystalline hydrocarbon layers stabilizes their properties in an ambient environment.


Nano Letters | 2016

van der Waals Solids from Self-Assembled Nanoscale Building Blocks

Bonnie Choi; Jaeeun Yu; Daniel W. Paley; M. Tuan Trinh; Maria V. Paley; Jessica M. Karch; Andrew C. Crowther; Chul Ho Lee; Roger A. Lalancette; X.-Y. Zhu; Philip Kim; Michael L. Steigerwald; Colin Nuckolls; Xavier Roy

Traditional atomic van der Waals materials such as graphene, hexagonal boron-nitride, and transition metal dichalcogenides have received widespread attention due to the wealth of unusual physical and chemical behaviors that arise when charges, spins, and vibrations are confined to a plane. Though not as widespread as their atomic counterparts, molecule-based two-dimensional (2D) layered solids offer significant benefits; their structural flexibility will enable the development of materials with tunable properties. Here we describe a layered van der Waals solid self-assembled from a structure-directing building block and C60 fullerene. The resulting crystalline solid contains a corrugated monolayer of neutral fullerenes and can be mechanically exfoliated. The absorption spectrum of the bulk solid shows an optical gap of 390 ± 40 meV that is consistent with thermal activation energy obtained from electrical transport measurement. We find that the dimensional confinement of fullerenes significantly modulates the optical and electronic properties compared to the bulk solid.


Applied Physics Letters | 2015

A solid dielectric gated graphene nanosensor in electrolyte solutions

Yibo Zhu; Cheng Wang; Nicholas Petrone; Jaeeun Yu; Colin Nuckolls; James Hone; Qiao Lin

This letter presents a graphene field effect transistor (GFET) nanosensor that, with a solid gate provided by a high-κ dielectric, allows analyte detection in liquid media at low gate voltages. The gate is embedded within the sensor and thus is isolated from a sample solution, offering a high level of integration and miniaturization and eliminating errors caused by the liquid disturbance, desirable for both in vitro and in vivo applications. We demonstrate that the GFET nanosensor can be used to measure pH changes in a range of 5.3-9.3. Based on the experimental observations and quantitative analysis, the charging of an electrical double layer capacitor is found to be the major mechanism of pH sensing.


Nano Letters | 2016

Single-Molecule Reaction Chemistry in Patterned Nanowells

Delphine Bouilly; Jason Hon; Nathan S. Daly; Scott M. Trocchia; Sefi Vernick; Jaeeun Yu; Steven B. Warren; Ruben L. Gonzalez; Kenneth L. Shepard; Colin Nuckolls

A new approach to synthetic chemistry is performed in ultraminiaturized, nanofabricated reaction chambers. Using lithographically defined nanowells, we achieve single-point covalent chemistry on hundreds of individual carbon nanotube transistors, providing robust statistics and unprecedented spatial resolution in adduct position. Each device acts as a sensor to detect, in real-time and through quantized changes in conductance, single-point functionalization of the nanotube as well as consecutive chemical reactions, molecular interactions, and molecular conformational changes occurring on the resulting single-molecule probe. In particular, we use a set of sequential bioconjugation reactions to tether a single-strand of DNA to the device and record its repeated, reversible folding into a G-quadruplex structure. The stable covalent tether allows us to measure the same molecule in different solutions, revealing the characteristic increased stability of the G-quadruplex structure in the presence of potassium ions (K+) versus sodium ions (Na+). Nanowell-confined reaction chemistry on carbon nanotube devices offers a versatile method to isolate and monitor individual molecules during successive chemical reactions over an extended period of time.


Journal of Vacuum Science & Technology. B. Nanotechnology and Microelectronics: Materials, Processing, Measurement, and Phenomena | 2013

Fabrication of hundreds of field effect transistors on a single carbon nanotube for basic studies and molecular devices

Xian Zhang; Daniel Chenet; Bumjung Kim; Jaeeun Yu; Jizhou Tang; Colin Nuckolls; James Hone

High-throughput fabrication of carbon nanotube field effect transistors (CNTFETs) with uniform properties has been a challenge since they were first fabricated in 1998. Here, the authors report a novel fabrication method to produce a 1 × 1 cm2 chip with over 700 CNTFETs fabricated around one single carbon nanotube (CNT). This large number of devices allows us to study the stability and uniformity of CNTFET properties. The authors grow flow-aligned CNTs on a SiO2/Si substrate by chemical vapor deposition and locate a single long CNT (as long as 1 cm) by scanning electron microscopy. Two photolithography steps are then used, first to pattern contacts and bonding pads, and next to define a mask to ‘burn’ away additional nanotubes by oxygen plasma etch. A fabrication yield of ∼72% is achieved. The authors present statistics of the transport properties of these devices, which indicates that all the CNTFETs share the same threshold voltage, and similar on-state conductance. These devices are then used to measur...


ACS central science | 2017

Two-Dimensional Nanosheets from Redox-Active Superatoms

Anouck M. Champsaur; Jaeeun Yu; Xavier Roy; Daniel W. Paley; Michael L. Steigerwald; Colin Nuckolls; Christopher Bejger

We describe a new approach to synthesize two-dimensional (2D) nanosheets from the bottom-up. We functionalize redox-active superatoms with groups that can direct their assembly into multidimensional solids. We synthesized Co6Se8[PEt2(4-C6H4COOH)]6 and found that it forms a crystalline assembly. The solid-state structure is a three-dimensional (3D) network in which the carboxylic acids form intercluster hydrogen bonds. We modify the self-assembly by replacing the reversible hydrogen bonds that hold the superatoms together with zinc carboxylate bonds via the solvothermal reaction of Co6Se8[PEt2(4-C6H4COOH)]6 with Zn(NO3)2. We obtain two types of crystalline materials using this approach: one is a 3D solid and the other consists of stacked layers of 2D sheets. The dimensionality is controlled by subtle changes in reaction conditions. These 2D sheets can be chemically exfoliated, and the exfoliated, ultrathin 2D layers are soluble. After they are deposited on a substrate, they can be imaged. We cast them onto an electrode surface and show that they retain the redox activity of the superatom building blocks due to the porosity in the sheets.


international conference on micro electro mechanical systems | 2015

A solid-gated graphene fet sensor for PH measurements

Yibo Zhu; Cheng Wang; Nicholas Petrone; Jaeeun Yu; Colin Nuckolls; James Hone; Qiao Lin

This paper presents a graphene field effect transistor (GFET) nanosensor that, with a solid gate provided by a high-κ dielectric, allows analyte detection in liquid media at low gate voltages. The gate is embedded within the sensor and thus is isolated from a sample solution, offering a high level of integration and miniaturization and eliminating errors caused by the liquid disturbance, desirable for both in vitro and in vivo applications. We demonstrate that the GFET nanosensor can be used to measure pH changes in a range of 5.3-9.3. Based on the experimental observations and quantitative analysis, the charging of an electrical double layer capacitor is found to be the major mechanism of pH sensing.

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