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Dive into the research topics where Junhoi Kim is active.

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Featured researches published by Junhoi Kim.


Nature Materials | 2010

Colour-barcoded magnetic microparticles for multiplexed bioassays

Howon Lee; Junhoi Kim; Hyoki Kim; Jiyun Kim; Sunghoon Kwon

Encoded particles have a demonstrated value for multiplexed high-throughput bioassays such as drug discovery and clinical diagnostics. In diverse samples, the ability to use a large number of distinct identification codes on assay particles is important to increase throughput. Proper handling schemes are also needed to readout these codes on free-floating probe microparticles. Here we create vivid, free-floating structural coloured particles with multi-axis rotational control using a colour-tunable magnetic material and a new printing method. Our colour-barcoded magnetic microparticles offer a coding capacity easily into the billions with distinct magnetic handling capabilities including active positioning for code readouts and active stirring for improved reaction kinetics in microscale environments. A DNA hybridization assay is done using the colour-barcoded magnetic microparticles to demonstrate multiplexing capabilities.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Magnetochromatic Microspheres: Rotating Photonic Crystals

Jianping Ge; Howon Lee; Le He; Junhoi Kim; Zhenda Lu; Hyoki Kim; James Goebl; Sunghoon Kwon; Yadong Yin

Magnetochromatic microspheres have been fabricated through instant assembly of superparamagnetic (SPM) colloidal particles inside emulsion droplets of UV curable resin followed by an immediate UV curing process to polymerize the droplets and fix the ordered structures. When dispersed in the liquid droplets, superparamagnetic Fe(3)O(4)@SiO(2) core/shell particles self-organize under the balanced interaction of repulsive and attractive forces to form one-dimensional chains, each of which contains periodically arranged particles diffracting visible light and displaying field-tunable colors. UV initiated polymerization of the oligomers of the resin fixes the periodic structures inside the droplet microspheres and retains the diffraction property. Because the superparamagnetic chains tend to align themselves along the field direction, it is very convenient to control the orientation of such photonic microspheres and, accordingly, their diffractive colors, by changing the orientation of the crystal lattice relative to the incident light using magnetic fields. The excellent stability together with the capability of fast on/off switching of the diffraction by magnetic fields makes the system suitable for applications such as color display, rewritable signage, and sensors. As a simple demonstration, we have fabricated a display unit that has on/off bistable states by embedding the magnetochromatic microspheres in a matrix that can thermally switch between solid and liquid phases.


Nature Materials | 2011

Programming magnetic anisotropy in polymeric microactuators

Jiyun Kim; Su Eun Chung; Sung-Eun Choi; Howon Lee; Junhoi Kim; Sunghoon Kwon

Polymeric microcomponents are widely used in microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) and lab-on-a-chip devices, but they suffer from the lack of complex motion, effective addressability and precise shape control. To address these needs, we fabricated polymeric nanocomposite microactuators driven by programmable heterogeneous magnetic anisotropy. Spatially modulated photopatterning was applied in a shape-independent manner to microactuator components by successive confinement of self-assembled magnetic nanoparticles in a fixed polymer matrix. By freely programming the rotational axis of each component, we demonstrate that the polymeric microactuators can undergo predesigned, complex two- and three-dimensional motion.


Nano Letters | 2011

Three-Dimensional Assembly of Nanoparticles from Charged Aerosols

Heechul Lee; Sukbeom You; Peter V. Pikhitsa; Junhoi Kim; Sunghoon Kwon; Chang Gyu Woo; Mansoo Choi

The capability of assembling nanoparticles into a desired ordered pattern is a key to realize novel devices which are based not only on the unique properties of nanoparticles but also on the arrangements of nanoparticles. While two-dimensional arrays of nanoparticles have been successfully demonstrated by various techniques, a controlled way of building ordered arrays of three-dimensional (3D) nanoparticle structures remains challenging. We report that a variety of 3D nanoparticle structures can be formed in a controlled way based on the ion-induced focusing, electrical scaffold, and antenna effects from charged aerosols. Particle trajectory calculations successfully predict the whole process of 3D assembly. New surface enhanced Raman scattering substrates based on our 3D assembly were constructed as an example showing the viability of the present approach. This report extends the current capability of positioning nanoparticles on surface to another spatial dimension, which can serve as the foundation of future optical, magnetic, and electronic devices taking the advantage of multidimensions.


Advanced Materials | 2015

Biomimetic Microfingerprints for Anti‐Counterfeiting Strategies

Hyung Jong Bae; Sangwook Bae; Cheolheon Park; Sangkwon Han; Junhoi Kim; Lily Nari Kim; Kibeom Kim; Suk-Heung Song; Wook Park; Sunghoon Kwon

An unclonable, fingerprint-mimicking anti-counterfeiting strategy is presented that encrypts polymeric particles with randomly generated silica film wrinkles. The generated wrinkle codes are as highly unique as human fingerprints and are technically irreproducible. Superior to previous physical unclonable functions, codes are tunable on demand and generable on various geometries. Reliable authentication of real-world products that have these microfingerprints is demonstrated using optical decoding methods.


Biomicrofluidics | 2010

Optofluidic in situ maskless lithography of charge selective nanoporous hydrogel for DNA preconcentration.

Hyoki Kim; Junhoi Kim; Eun-Geun Kim; Austen James Heinz; Sunghoon Kwon; Honggu Chun

An optofluidic maskless photopolymerization process was developed for in situ negatively charged nanoporous hydrogel [poly-AMPS (2-acrylamido-2-methyl-1-propanesulfonic acid)] fabrication. The optofluidic maskless lithography system, which combines a high power UV source and digital mirror device, enables fast polymerization of arbitrary shaped hydrogels in a microfluidic device. The poly-AMPS hydrogel structures were positioned near the intersections of two microchannels, and were used as a cation-selective filter for biological sample preconcentration. Preconcentration dynamics as well as the fabricated polymer shape were analyzed in three-dimensions using fluorescein sample and a confocal microscope. Finally, single-stranded DNA preconcentration was demonstrated for polymerase chain reaction-free signal enhancement.


Analytical Chemistry | 2013

Potentiometric Multichannel Cytometer Microchip for High-throughput Microdispersion Analysis

Junhoi Kim; Eun Geun Kim; Sangwook Bae; Sunghoon Kwon; Honggu Chun

The parallelization of microfluidic cytometry is expected to lead to considerably enhanced throughput enabling point-of-care diagnosis. In this article, the development of a microfluidic potentiometric multichannel cytometer is presented. Parallelized microfluidic channels sharing a fluid path inevitably suffer from interchannel signal crosstalk that results from electrical coupling within the microfluidic channel network. By employing three planar electrodes within a single detection channel, we electrically decoupled each channel unit, thereby enabling parallel analysis by using a single cytometer microchip with multiple microfluidic channels. The triple-electrode configuration is validated by analyzing the size and concentration of polystyrene microbeads (diameters: 1.99, 2.58, 3, and 3.68 μm; concentration range: ∼2 × 10(5) mL(-1) to ∼1 × 10(7) mL(-1)) and bacterial microdispersion samples (Bacillus subtilis, concentration range: ∼4 × 10(5) CFU mL(-1) to ∼3 × 10(6) CFU mL(-1)). Crosstalk-free parallelized analysis is then demonstrated using a 16-channel potentiometric cytometer (maximum cross-correlation coefficients |r|: < 0.13 in all channel combinations). A detection throughput of ∼48,000 s(-1) was achieved; the throughout can be easily increased with the degree of parallelism of a single microchip without additional technical complexities. Therefore, this methodology should enable high-throughput and low-cost cytometry.


Biomicrofluidics | 2018

Hierarchical shape-by-shape assembly of microparticles for micrometer-scale viral delivery of two different genes

Daewon Lee; Amos Chungwon Lee; Sangkwon Han; Hyung Jong Bae; Seo Woo Song; Yunjin Jeong; Dong Yoon Oh; Seongkyu Cho; Junhoi Kim; Wook Park; Sunghoon Kwon

Understanding tissue engineering using a bottom-up approach has been hindered by technical limitations because no platform can demonstrate the controlled formation of a heterogeneous population of cells in microscale. Here, we demonstrate hierarchical shape-by-shape assembly of virus-laden particles into larger ones to transfect two different genes on the seeded cells. We show that smaller daughter particles with different sizes and shapes can be assembled into the matching indentations of larger parent particles with different sizes and shapes. Then, we transfected a population of cells with two different gene-transfecting viruses, each of which was laden on the parent or daughter particles.


conference on lasers and electro optics | 2011

Large scale structural color patterning using magnetochromatic microspheres with patterned magnet

Younghoon Song; Junhoi Kim; Howon Lee; Sunghoon Kwon

Large scale, tunable structural color patterning is demonstrated using magnetochromatic microspheres which involve 1D chain-like ordered structure of superparamagnetic nanoparticle under a patterned external magnetic field. Also single materials based simple magnetochromatic microsphere fabrication method is presented


conference on lasers and electro optics | 2010

Optofluidic synthesis of magnetic microparticles with structural colors

Junhoi Kim; Hyoki Kim; Wook Park; Younghoon Song; Sunghoon Kwon

We present optofluidic synthesis of magnetic microparticles showing structural color property. We also demonstrate fabrication of complex magnetic microparticles having multiple subdomains with different color patterns.

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Sunghoon Kwon

Seoul National University

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Howon Lee

Seoul National University

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Hyoki Kim

Seoul National University

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Younghoon Song

Seoul National University

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Sung-Eun Choi

Seoul National University

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Yadong Yin

University of California

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Hyung Jong Bae

Seoul National University

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Sangkwon Han

Seoul National University

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권성훈

Seoul National University Hospital

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