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Dive into the research topics where Junyeong Park is active.

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Featured researches published by Junyeong Park.


Bioresource Technology | 2012

The effect of torrefaction on the chemistry of fast-pyrolysis bio-oil

Jiajia Meng; Junyeong Park; David Tilotta; Sunkyu Park

Fast pyrolysis was performed on torrefied loblolly pine and the collected bio-oils were analyzed to compare the effect of the torrefaction treatment on their quality. The results of the analyses show that bio-oils produced from torrefied wood have improved oxygen-to-carbon ratios compared to those from the original wood with the penalty of a decrease in bio-oil yield. The extent of this improvement depends on the torrefaction severity. Based on the GC/MS analysis of the pyrolysis bio-oils, bio-oils produced from torrefied biomass show different compositions compared to that from the original wood. Specifically, the former becomes more concentrated in pyrolytic lignin with less water content than the latter. It was considered that torrefaction could be a potential upgrading method to improve the quality of bio-oil, which might be a useful feedstock for phenolic-based chemicals.


Journal of Hazardous Materials | 2013

Adsorption of selected endocrine disrupting compounds and pharmaceuticals on activated biochars.

Chanil Jung; Junyeong Park; Kwang Hun Lim; Sunkyu Park; Jiyong Heo; Namguk Her; Jeill Oh; Soyoung Yun; Yeomin Yoon

Chemically activated biochar produced under oxygenated (O-biochar) and oxygen-free (N-biochar) conditions were characterized and the adsorption of endocrine disrupting compounds (EDCs): bisphenol A (BPA), atrazine (ATR), 17 α-ethinylestradiol (EE2), and pharmaceutical active compounds (PhACs); sulfamethoxazole (SMX), carbamazepine (CBM), diclofenac (DCF), ibuprofen (IBP) on both biochars and commercialized powdered activated carbon (PAC) were investigated. Characteristic analysis of adsorbents by solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) was conducted to determine better understanding about the EDCs/PhACs adsorption. N-biochar consisted of higher polarity moieties with more alkyl (0-45 ppm), methoxyl (45-63 ppm), O-alkyl (63-108 ppm), and carboxyl carbon (165-187 ppm) content than other adsorbents, while aromaticity of O-biochar was higher than that of N-biochar. O-biochar was composed mostly of aromatic moieties, with low H/C and O/C ratios compared to the highly polarized N-biochar that contained diverse polar functional groups. The higher surface area and pore volume of N-biochar resulted in higher adsorption capacity toward EDCs/PhACs along with atomic-level molecular structural property than O-biochar and PAC. N-biochar had a highest adsorption capacity of all chemicals, suggesting that N-biochar derived from loblolly pine chip is a promising sorbent for agricultural and environmental applications. The adsorption of pH-sensitive dissociable SMX, DCF, IBP, and BPA varied and the order of adsorption capacity was correlated with the hydrophobicity (Kow) of adsorbates throughout the all adsorbents, whereas adsorption of non-ionizable CBM, ATR, and EE2 in varied pH allowed adsorbents to interact with hydrophobic property of adsorbates steadily throughout the study.


Biomacromolecules | 2011

Selective Detection of Crystalline Cellulose in Plant Cell Walls with Sum-Frequency-Generation (SFG) Vibration Spectroscopy

Anna L. Barnette; Laura C. Bradley; Brandon D. Veres; Edward P. Schreiner; Yong Bum Park; Junyeong Park; Sunkyu Park; Seong H. Kim

The selective detection of crystalline cellulose in biomass was demonstrated with sum-frequency-generation (SFG) vibration spectroscopy. SFG is a second-order nonlinear optical response from a system where the optical centrosymmetry is broken. In secondary plant cell walls that contain mostly cellulose, hemicellulose, and lignin with varying concentrations, only certain vibration modes in the crystalline cellulose structure can meet the noninversion symmetry requirements. Thus, SFG can be used to detect and analyze crystalline cellulose selectively in lignocellulosic biomass without extraction of noncellulosic species from biomass or deconvolution of amorphous spectra. The selective detection of crystalline cellulose in lignocellulosic biomass is not readily achievable with other techniques such as XRD, solid-state NMR, IR, and Raman analyses. Therefore, the SFG analysis presents a unique opportunity to reveal the cellulose crystalline structure in lignocellulosic biomass.


Bioresource Technology | 2013

Activated carbon from biochar: Influence of its physicochemical properties on the sorption characteristics of phenanthrene

Junyeong Park; Ivan Hung; Zhehong Gan; Orlando J. Rojas; Kwang Hun Lim; Sunkyu Park

The relationship between physicochemical properties of biochar-based activated carbons and its adsorption was investigated using an aromatic model compound, phenanthrene. Solid-state (13)C NMR analysis indicated more condensed aromatic structures when pyrolysis temperature increased or after activation process induced. The increasing aromaticity and non-protonated carbon fraction of the activated biochar treated at 300°C amounted to 14.7% and 24.0%, respectively, compared to 7.4% and 4.4% for biochar treated at 700°C. The surface area and pore volume were reduced with the increase in pyrolysis temperature, but increased after activation. Surface characteristics correlated with the initial sorption rate and equilibrium concentration of phenanthrene, but not with the aromaticity. Solid-state (2)H NMR for phenanthrene-d10 saturated activated biochars, however, showed substantial difference in molecular mobility, which might be due to the high aromaticity of the activated biochars. Overall, these results provide an opportunity to manipulate the characteristics of biomass-based adsorbents based on the application needs.


Bioresource Technology | 2016

Use of Mechanical Refining to Improve the Production of Low-Cost Sugars from Lignocellulosic Biomass

Junyeong Park; Brandon W. Jones; Bonwook Koo; Xiaowen Chen; Melvin P. Tucker; Ju-Hyun Yu; Thomas Pschorn; Richard A. Venditti; Sunkyu Park

Mechanical refining is widely used in the pulp and paper industry to enhance the end-use properties of products by creating external fibrillation and internal delamination. This technology can be directly applied to biochemical conversion processes. By implementing mechanical refining technology, biomass recalcitrance to enzyme hydrolysis can be overcome and carbohydrate conversion can be enhanced with commercially attractive levels of enzymes. In addition, chemical and thermal pretreatment severity can be reduced to achieve the same level of carbohydrate conversion, which reduces pretreatment cost and results in lower concentrations of inhibitors. Refining is versatile and a commercially proven technology that can be operated at process flows of ∼ 1500 dry tons per day of biomass. This paper reviews the utilization of mechanical refining in the pulp and paper industry and summarizes the recent development in applications for biochemical conversion, which potentially make an overall biorefinery process more economically viable.


Journal of Microbiology | 2007

Biological Pretreatment of Softwood Pinus densiflora by Three White Rot Fungi

Jaewon Lee; Ki-Seob Gwak; Junyeong Park; Mi-Jin Park; Don-Ha Choi; Mi Kwon; In-Gyu Choi


Journal of Analytical and Applied Pyrolysis | 2013

Transformation of lignocellulosic biomass during torrefaction.

Junyeong Park; Jiajia Meng; Kwang Hun Lim; Orlando J. Rojas; Sunkyu Park


Bioresources | 2014

Cellulosic Substrates for Removal of Pollutants from Aqueous Systems: A Review. Part 4. Dissolved Petrochemical Compounds

Martin A. Hubbe; Junyeong Park; Sunkyu Park


Bioresources | 2015

Delignification of Lignocellulosic Biomass and Its Effect on Subsequent Enzymatic Hydrolysis

Junyeong Park; Heenae Shin; Seunghyun Yoo; Justin O. Zoppe; Sunkyu Park


Bioresources | 2016

Effect of the Two-Stage Autohydrolysis of Hardwood on the Enzymatic Saccharification and Subsequent Fermentation with an Efficient Xylose-Utilizing Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Junyeong Park; Ziyu Wang; Won-Heong Lee; Hasan Jameel; Yong Su Jin; Sunkyu Park

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Sunkyu Park

North Carolina State University

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Jiajia Meng

North Carolina State University

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Kwang Hun Lim

East Carolina University

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David Tilotta

North Carolina State University

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In-Gyu Choi

Seoul National University

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Don-Ha Choi

Forest Research Institute

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Anna L. Barnette

Pennsylvania State University

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Bonwook Koo

North Carolina State University

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Brandon W. Jones

North Carolina State University

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