Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Joo-Seong Kim is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Joo-Seong Kim.


Nano Letters | 2013

Wearable Textile Battery Rechargeable by Solar Energy

Yonghee Lee; Joo-Seong Kim; Jonghyeon Noh; Inhwa Lee; Hyeong Jun Kim; Sunghun Choi; Jeongmin Seo; Seokwoo Jeon; Taek-Soo Kim; Jung-Yong Lee; Jang Wook Choi

Wearable electronics represent a significant paradigm shift in consumer electronics since they eliminate the necessity for separate carriage of devices. In particular, integration of flexible electronic devices with clothes, glasses, watches, and skin will bring new opportunities beyond what can be imagined by current inflexible counterparts. Although considerable progresses have been seen for wearable electronics, lithium rechargeable batteries, the power sources of the devices, do not keep pace with such progresses due to tenuous mechanical stabilities, causing them to remain as the limiting elements in the entire technology. Herein, we revisit the key components of the battery (current collector, binder, and separator) and replace them with the materials that support robust mechanical endurance of the battery. The final full-cells in the forms of clothes and watchstraps exhibited comparable electrochemical performance to those of conventional metal foil-based cells even under severe folding-unfolding motions simulating actual wearing conditions. Furthermore, the wearable textile battery was integrated with flexible and lightweight solar cells on the battery pouch to enable convenient solar-charging capabilities.


Nano Letters | 2012

A Truncated Manganese Spinel Cathode for Excellent Power and Lifetime in Lithium-Ion Batteries

Joo-Seong Kim; Kyungsu Kim; Woosuk Cho; Weon Ho Shin; Ryoji Kanno; Jang Wook Choi

Spinel-structured lithium manganese oxide (LiMn(2)O(4)) cathodes have been successfully commercialized for various lithium battery applications and are among the strongest candidates for emerging large-scale applications. Despite its various advantages including high power capability, however, LiMn(2)O(4) chronically suffers from limited cycle life, originating from well-known Mn dissolution. An ironical feature with the Mn dissolution is that the surface orientations supporting Li diffusion and thus the power performance are especially vulnerable to the Mn dissolution, making both high power and long lifetime very difficult to achieve simultaneously. In this investigation, we address this contradictory issue of LiMn(2)O(4) by developing a truncated octahedral structure in which most surfaces are aligned to the crystalline orientations with minimal Mn dissolution, while a small portion of the structure is truncated along the orientations to support Li diffusion and thus facilitate high discharge rate capabilities. When compared to control structures with much smaller dimensions, the truncated octahedral structure as large as 500 nm exhibits better performance in both discharge rate performance and cycle life, thus resolving the previously conflicting aspects of LiMn(2)O(4).


Nano Letters | 2013

One-dimensional carbon-sulfur composite fibers for Na-S rechargeable batteries operating at room temperature.

Tae Hoon Hwang; Dae Soo Jung; Joo-Seong Kim; Byung Gon Kim; Jang Wook Choi

Na-S batteries are one type of molten salt battery and have been used to support stationary energy storage systems for several decades. Despite their successful applications based on long cycle lives and low cost of raw materials, Na-S cells require high temperatures above 300 °C for their operations, limiting their propagation into a wide range of applications. Herein, we demonstrate that Na-S cells with solid state active materials can perform well even at room temperature when sulfur-containing carbon composites generated from a simple thermal reaction were used as sulfur positive electrodes. Furthermore, this structure turned out to be robust during repeated (de)sodiation for ~500 cycles and enabled extraordinarily high rate performance when one-dimensional morphology is adopted using scalable electrospinning processes. The current study suggests that solid-state Na-S cells with appropriate atomic configurations of sulfur active materials could cover diverse battery applications where cost of raw materials is critical.


Nano Letters | 2015

The High Performance of Crystal Water Containing Manganese Birnessite Cathodes for Magnesium Batteries.

Kwan Woo Nam; Sangryun Kim; Soyeon Lee; Michael Salama; Ivgeni Shterenberg; Yossi Gofer; Joo-Seong Kim; Eunjeong Yang; Chan Sun Park; Ju-Sik Kim; Seok-Soo Lee; Won-Seok Chang; Seok-Gwang Doo; Yong Nam Jo; Yousung Jung; Doron Aurbach; Jang Wook Choi

Rechargeable magnesium batteries have lately received great attention for large-scale energy storage systems due to their high volumetric capacities, low materials cost, and safe characteristic. However, the bivalency of Mg(2+) ions has made it challenging to find cathode materials operating at high voltages with decent (de)intercalation kinetics. In an effort to overcome this challenge, we adopt an unconventional approach of engaging crystal water in the layered structure of Birnessite MnO2 because the crystal water can effectively screen electrostatic interactions between Mg(2+) ions and the host anions. The crucial role of the crystal water was revealed by directly visualizing its presence and dynamic rearrangement using scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM). Moreover, the importance of lowering desolvation energy penalty at the cathode-electrolyte interface was elucidated by working with water containing nonaqueous electrolytes. In aqueous electrolytes, the decreased interfacial energy penalty by hydration of Mg(2+) allows Birnessite MnO2 to achieve a large reversible capacity (231.1 mAh g(-1)) at high operating voltage (2.8 V vs Mg/Mg(2+)) with excellent cycle life (62.5% retention after 10000 cycles), unveiling the importance of effective charge shielding in the host and facile Mg(2+) ions transfer through the cathodes interface.


Nano Letters | 2015

A half millimeter thick coplanar flexible battery with wireless recharging capability.

Joo-Seong Kim; Dongah Ko; Dong-Joo Yoo; Dae Soo Jung; Cafer T. Yavuz; Nam-In Kim; In-Suk Choi; Jae Yong Song; Jang Wook Choi

Most of the existing flexible lithium ion batteries (LIBs) adopt the conventional cofacial cell configuration where anode, separator, and cathode are sequentially stacked and so have difficulty in the integration with emerging thin LIB applications, such as smart cards and medical patches. In order to overcome this shortcoming, herein, we report a coplanar cell structure in which anodes and cathodes are interdigitatedly positioned on the same plane. The coplanar electrode design brings advantages of enhanced bending tolerance and capability of increasing the cell voltage by in series-connection of multiple single-cells in addition to its suitability for the thickness reduction. On the basis of these structural benefits, we develop a coplanar flexible LIB that delivers 7.4 V with an entire cell thickness below 0.5 mm while preserving stable electrochemical performance throughout 5000 (un)bending cycles (bending radius = 5 mm). Also, even the pouch case serves as barriers between anodes and cathodes to prevent Li dendrite growth and short-circuit formation while saving the thickness. Furthermore, for convenient practical use wireless charging via inductive electromagnetic energy transfer and solar cell integration is demonstrated.


Angewandte Chemie | 2015

Direct Observation of an Anomalous Spinel-to-Layered Phase Transition Mediated by Crystal Water Intercalation

Sangryun Kim; Kwan Woo Nam; Soyeon Lee; Woosuk Cho; Joo-Seong Kim; Byung Gon Kim; Yoshifumi Oshima; Ju-Sik Kim; Seok-Gwang Doo; Hyuk Chang; Doron Aurbach; Jang Wook Choi

The phase transition of layered manganese oxides to spinel phases is a well-known phenomenon in rechargeable batteries and is the main origin of the capacity fading in these materials. This spontaneous phase transition is associated with the intrinsic properties of manganese, such as its size, preferred crystal positions, and reaction characteristics, and it is therefore very difficult to avoid. The introduction of crystal water by an electrochemical process enables the inverse phase transition from spinel to a layered Birnessite structure. Scanning transmission electron microscopy can be used to directly visualize the rearrangement of lattice atoms, the simultaneous insertion of crystal water, the formation of a transient structure at the phase boundary, and layer-by-layer progression of the phase transition from the edge. This research indicates that crystal water intercalation can reverse phase transformation with thermodynamically favored directionality.


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2014

Large area multi-stacked lithium-ion batteries for flexible and rollable applications

Joo-Seong Kim; Yonghee Lee; Inhwa Lee; Taek-Soo Kim; Myung-Hyun Ryou; Jang Wook Choi

The demand for lithium ion batteries (LIBs) in various flexible mobile electronic devices is continuously increasing. With this in mind, a vast number of smart approaches, such as implementation of conductive nanomaterials onto paper and textiles, have been recently demonstrated. Most of them were, however, limited to the single-cell level. In the present study, large area flexible battery modules were developed in an attempt to expand the knowledge and design accumulated from the single-cell level approaches to larger-scale applications. A multi-stacked configuration was adopted to produce a high areal energy density in each single-cell. Meanwhile textile-based electrodes on both sides grant mechanical stability, even on the module level, by efficiently releasing the stress generated during aggressive folding and rolling motions. Moreover, the connection between and stacking of the single-cells allow the wide tuning of the overall voltage and capacity of the module. This battery design should be immediately applicable to a broad range of outdoor, building, and military items.


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2013

Cotton-templated hierarchical porous structures for high power lithium rechargeable batteries

Dong In Choi; Hongkyung Lee; Dong Jin Lee; Kwan-Woo Nam; Joo-Seong Kim; Robert A. Huggins; Jung-Ki Park; Jang Wook Choi

High power full-cells of LiNi0.5Mn1.5O4–Li4Ti5O12 are demonstrated by engaging a scalable cotton-templated synthetic process. The cotton-templated method produces hierarchical structures in which primary particles in the range of 100–300 nm form three-dimensional porous secondary structures for both electrodes. While the primary particles in the smaller scales facilitate efficient electronic/ionic diffusion for high rate performance, the three-dimensional porous secondary structures remain stable during cycling for excellent cycle life. The synthetic method introduced herein is simple and universal, and should thus be applicable to other battery materials requiring high power performance.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2015

An Electrochemical Cell for Selective Lithium Capture from Seawater

Joo-Seong Kim; Yonghee Lee; Seungyeon Choi; Jaeho Shin; Hung-Cuong Dinh; Jang Wook Choi

Lithium (Li) is a core element of Li-ion batteries (LIBs). Recent developments in mobile electronics such as smartphones and tablet PCs as well as advent of large-scale LIB applications including electrical vehicles and grid-level energy storage systems have led to an increase in demand for LIBs, giving rise to a concern on the availability and market price of Li resources. However, the current Lime-Soda process that is responsible for greater than 80% of worldwide Li resource supply is applicable only in certain regions on earth where the Li concentrations are sufficiently high (salt lakes or salt pans). Moreover, not only is the process time-consuming (12-18 months), but post-treatments are also required for the purification of Li. Here, we have devised a location-independent electrochemical system for Li capture, which can operate within a short time period (a few hours to days). By engaging olivine LiFePO4 active electrode that improves interfacial properties via polydopamine coating, the electrochemical cell achieves 4330 times amplification in Li/Na ion selectivity (Li/Na molar ratio of initial solution = 0.01 and Li/Na molar ratio of final electrode = 43.3). In addition, the electrochemical system engages an I(-)/I3(-) redox couple in the other electrode for balancing of the redox states on both electrode sides and sustainable operations of the entire cell. Based on the electrochemical results, key material and interfacial properties that affect the selectivity in Li capture are identified.


Advanced Materials | 2018

A Colloidal‐Quantum‐Dot‐Based Self‐Charging System via the Near‐Infrared Band

Se-Woong Baek; Jungmin Cho; Joo-Seong Kim; Changjo Kim; Kwangmin Na; Sang-Hoon Lee; Sunhong Jun; Jung Hoon Song; Sohee Jeong; Jang Wook Choi; Jung-Yong Lee

A novel self-charging platform is proposed using colloidal-quantum-dot (CQD) photovoltaics (PVs) via the near-infrared (NIR) band for low-power electronics. Low-bandgap CQDs can convert invisible NIR light sources to electrical energy more efficiently than wider spectra because of reduced thermalization loss. This energy-conversion strategy via NIR photons ensures an enhanced photostability of the CQD devices. Furthermore, the NIR wireless charging system can be concealed using various colored and NIR-transparent fabric or films, providing aesthetic freedom. Finally, an NIR-driven wireless charging system is demonstrated for a wearable healthcare bracelet by integrating a CQD PVs receiver with a flexible lithium-ion battery and entirely embedding them into a flexible strap, enabling permanent self-charging without detachment.

Collaboration


Dive into the Joo-Seong Kim's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Sun-il Mho

Pohang University of Science and Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Won Il Cho

Korea Institute of Science and Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Woosuk Cho

Tokyo Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge