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Publication
Featured researches published by Ji Hoon Ryoo.
Nature Nanotechnology | 2015
Young Duck Kim; Hakseong Kim; Yujin Cho; Ji Hoon Ryoo; Cheol-Hwan Park; Pilkwang Kim; Yong Seung Kim; Sunwoo Lee; Yilei Li; Seung-Nam Park; Yong Shim Yoo; Duhee Yoon; Vincent E. Dorgan; Eric Pop; Tony F. Heinz; James Hone; Seung-Hyun Chun; Hyeonsik Cheong; Sangwook Lee; Myung-Ho Bae; Yun Daniel Park
Graphene and related two-dimensional materials are promising candidates for atomically thin, flexible and transparent optoelectronics. In particular, the strong light-matter interaction in graphene has allowed for the development of state-of-the-art photodetectors, optical modulators and plasmonic devices. In addition, electrically biased graphene on SiO2 substrates can be used as a low-efficiency emitter in the mid-infrared range. However, emission in the visible range has remained elusive. Here, we report the observation of bright visible light emission from electrically biased suspended graphene devices. In these devices, heat transport is greatly reduced. Hot electrons (∼2,800 K) therefore become spatially localized at the centre of the graphene layer, resulting in a 1,000-fold enhancement in thermal radiation efficiency. Moreover, strong optical interference between the suspended graphene and substrate can be used to tune the emission spectrum. We also demonstrate the scalability of this technique by realizing arrays of chemical-vapour-deposited graphene light emitters. These results pave the way towards the realization of commercially viable large-scale, atomically thin, flexible and transparent light emitters and displays with low operation voltage and graphene-based on-chip ultrafast optical communications.
Nano Letters | 2016
Jae-Ung Lee; Sungmin Lee; Ji Hoon Ryoo; Soonmin Kang; Tae Yun Kim; Pilkwang Kim; Cheol-Hwan Park; Je-Geun Park; Hyeonsik Cheong
Magnetism in two-dimensional materials is not only of fundamental scientific interest but also a promising candidate for numerous applications. However, studies so far, especially the experimental ones, have been mostly limited to the magnetism arising from defects, vacancies, edges, or chemical dopants which are all extrinsic effects. Here, we report on the observation of intrinsic antiferromagnetic ordering in the two-dimensional limit. By monitoring the Raman peaks that arise from zone folding due to antiferromagnetic ordering at the transition temperature, we demonstrate that FePS3 exhibits an Ising-type antiferromagnetic ordering down to the monolayer limit, in good agreement with the Onsager solution for two-dimensional order-disorder transition. The transition temperature remains almost independent of the thickness from bulk to the monolayer limit with TN ∼ 118 K, indicating that the weak interlayer interaction has little effect on the antiferromagnetic ordering.
Physical Review B | 2016
Ji Hoon Ryoo; Cheol-Hwan Park
We present a theory based on first-principles calculations explaining (i) why the tunability of spin polarizations of photoelectrons from
Npg Asia Materials | 2017
Ji Hoon Ryoo; Cheol-Hwan Park
{\mathrm{Bi}}_{2}{\mathrm{Se}}_{3}
Physical Review Letters | 2017
Pilkwang Kim; Cheol-Hwan Park; Ji Hoon Ryoo
(111) depends on the band index and Bloch wave vector of the surface state and (ii) why such tunability is absent in the case of isosymmetric Au (111). The results provide not only an explanation for the recent, puzzling experimental observations but also a guide toward making highly-tunable spin-polarized electron sources from topological insulators.
Physical Review B | 2017
Kenneth Gotlieb; Zhenglu Li; Chiu-Yun Lin; Chris Jozwiak; Ji Hoon Ryoo; Cheol-Hwan Park; Z. Hussain; Steven G. Louie; Alessandra Lanzara
It was previously believed that the Bloch electronic states of non-magnetic materials with inversion symmetry cannot have finite spin polarizations. However, since the seminal work by Zhang et al. [Nat. Phys. 10, 387-393 (2014)] on local spin polarizations of Bloch states in non-magnetic, centrosymmetric materials, the scope of spintronics has been significantly broadened. Here, we show, using a framework that is universally applicable independent of whether hidden spin polarizations are small (e.g., diamond, Si, Ge, and GaAs) or large (e.g., MoS2 and WSe2), that the corresponding quantity arising from orbital - instead of spin - degrees of freedom, the hidden orbital polarization, is (i) much more abundant in nature since it exists even without spin-orbit coupling and (ii) more fundamental since the interband matrix elements of the site-dependent orbital angular momentum operator determines the hidden spin polarization. We predict that the hidden spin polarization of transition metal dichalcogenides is reduced significantly upon compression. We suggest experimental signatures of hidden orbital polarization from photoemission spectroscopies and demonstrate that the current-induced hidden orbital polarization may play a far more important role than its spin counterpart in antiferromagnetic information technology by calculating the current-driven antiferromagnetism in compressed silicon.
arXiv: Materials Science | 2018
Ji Hoon Ryoo; Cheol-Hwan Park
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2018
Kangwon Kim; Soo Yeon Lim; Jae-Ung Lee; Sungmin Lee; Tae Yun Kim; Ji Hoon Ryoo; Pilkwang Kim; Cheol-Hwan Park; Je-Guen Park; Hyeonsik Cheong
arXiv: Materials Science | 2017
Pilkwang Kim; Ji Hoon Ryoo; Cheol-Hwan Park
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2017
Jae-Ung Lee; Sungmin Lee; Ji Hoon Ryoo; Soonmin Kang; Tae Yun Kim; Pilkwang Kim; Cheol-Hwan Park; Je-Geun Park; Hyeonsik Cheong