Sangwoo Jin
Pohang University of Science and Technology
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Publication
Featured researches published by Sangwoo Jin.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2008
Jinhwan Yoon; Sun Young Jung; Byungcheol Ahn; Kyuyoung Heo; Sangwoo Jin; Tomokazu Iyoda; Hirohisa Yoshida; Moonhor Ree
In this study, we quantitatively investigated the temperature-dependent phase transition behaviors of thin films of an interesting amphiphilic diblock copolymer, poly(ethylene oxide)-b-poly(11-[4-(4-butylphenylazo)phenoxy]undecyl methacrylate) (p(EO)-b-p(MAAZ)) and the resulting morphological structures by using synchrotron grazing incidence X-ray scattering (GIXS) and differential scanning calorimetry. The quantitative GIXS analysis showed that the diblock copolymer in the homogeneous, isotropic melt state undergoes phase-separation near 190 degrees C and then forms a body-centered cubic (BCC) structure of spherical p(EO) domains in the p(MAAZ) matrix, at which point the p(EO) domains and the p(MAAZ) matrix are both in amorphous, liquid states. The BCC structure of spherical p(EO) domains is converted to a hexagonal cylinder structure near 120 degrees C, which is induced by the transformation of the isotropic phase of the p(MAAZ) matrix to the smectic A phase, which is composed of a laterally ordered structure of p(MAAZ) blocks with fully extended side groups. The resulting hexagonal cylinder structure is very stable below 120 degrees C. This microscopic hexagonal cylinder structure is retained as the smectic A phase of the p(MAAZ) matrix undergoes further transitions to smectic C near 104 degrees C and to a smectic X phase near 76 degrees C, while the amorphous, liquid phase of the p(EO) cylinders undergoes crystallization near -15 degrees C. These complicated temperature-dependent disorder-order and order-order phase transitions in the films were found to take place reversibly during the heating run. A face-centered orthorhombic structure of p(EO) domains was also found during the heating run and is an intermediate structure in the hexagonal cylinder structure to BCC structure transformation. We use these structural analysis results to propose molecular structure models at various temperatures for thin films of the diblock polymer.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2008
Kyuyoung Heo; Jinhwan Yoon; Kyeong Sik Jin; Sangwoo Jin; Harumi Sato; Yukihiro Ozaki; Michael Matthew Satkowski; Isao Noda; Moonhor Ree
The crystallization behavior of microbially synthesized poly(3-hydroxybutyrate) (PHB) and its copolymers [P(HB-co-HHx)] containing 2.5, 3.4, and 12 mol % 3-hydroxyhexanoate (HHx) comonomer and the melting of the resultant crystals were studied in detail using time-resolved small-angle X-ray scattering and differential scanning calorimetry. The polyesters were found to undergo primary crystallization as well as secondary crystallization. In the primary crystallization, the thicknesses of the lamellar crystals were sensitive to the crystallization temperature, but no thickening was observed throughout the entire crystallization at a given temperature. The thickness of the lamellar crystals in the PHB homopolymer was always larger than that of the amorphous layers. In the copolymers, by contrast, the randomly distributed HHx comonomer units were found to be excluded from the lamellar crystals into the amorphous regions during the isothermal crystallization process. This interrupted the crystallization of the copolymer chains, resulting in the formation of lamellar crystals with thicknesses smaller than those of the amorphous layers. The lamellar crystals in the copolymers had lower electron densities compared to those formed in the PHB homopolymer. On the other hand, secondary crystallization favorably occurred during the later stage of isothermal crystallization in competition with the continuous primary crystallization, forming secondary crystals in amorphous regions, in particular in the amorphous layers between the primarily formed lamellar crystal stacks. Compared to the primarily formed lamellar crystals, the secondary crystals had short-range-ordered structures of smaller size, a broader size distribution, and a lower electron density.
Journal of Applied Crystallography | 2007
Sangwoo Jin; Jinhwan Yoon; Kyuyoung Heo; Hae-Woong Park; Jehan Kim; Kwang-Woo Kim; Tae Joo Shin; Taihyun Chang; Moonhor Ree
In this study, a grazing-incidence X-ray scattering (GIXS) formula was derived for gyroid structures formed in thin films supported on substrates. Two-dimensional GIXS patterns were measured for gyroid structures formed in polystyrene-b-polyisoprene (PS-b-PI) diblock copolymer nanometre-scale thin films supported on silicon substrates, and a quantitative analysis of the obtained two-dimensional GIXS data was conducted with the scattering formula. This analysis provided details (lattice parameter, width of the PS phase, positional distortion factor, orientation and orientation distribution) of the gyroid structures developed in the diblock copolymer thin films that are not easily obtained using conventional techniques. Moreover, it was possible to simulate complete and detailed two-dimensional GIXS patterns with the determined structure parameters.
Journal of Applied Crystallography | 2008
Kyuyoung Heo; Jinhwan Yoon; Sangwoo Jin; Jehan Kim; Kwang-Woo Kim; Tae Joo Shin; Bonghoon Chung; Taihyun Chang; Moonhor Ree
Grazing-incidence X-ray scattering (GIXS) formulas for hexagonally perforated layer (HPL) structures with ABC and AB stacking sequences were derived, and used in the quantitative analysis of the two-dimensional GIXS patterns of polystyrene-b-polyisoprene (PS-b-PI) diblock copolymer thin films supported on silicon substrates. This quantitative analysis provided detailed information (shape, size and size distribution, packing order, layer packing sequence, and orientation) about the HPL structure of the diblock copolymer films that cannot be easily obtained with conventional X-ray and neutron scattering techniques or with conventional microscopic methods.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2008
Jinhwan Yoon; Seung-Woo Lee; Seungchel Choi; Kyuyoung Heo; Kyeong Sik Jin; Sangwoo Jin; Gahee Kim; Jehan Kim; Kwang-Woo Kim; Heesoo Kim; Moonhor Ree
In this study, we report the first production of two-dimensionally well-ordered molecular multilayers (i.e., with a well-defined molecular lamellar structure) based on the antiparallel beta-sheet chain conformation in thin films of a brush polypeptide, poly(S-n-hexadecyl-dl-homocysteine) (PHHC), through the use of a simple spin-coating process and the quantitative structural and property analysis of the thin films using a grazing incidence X-ray scattering technique combined with Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy and differential scanning calorimetry. These analyses provide detailed information about the structure and molecular conformation of the self-assembled lamellae in the PHHC thin film, which is not easily obtained using conventional techniques. Moreover, we used the in situ measurements carried out at various temperatures and the data analyses to establish mechanisms for the evolution of the self-assembled lamellar structures in the film and for their melting. In addition, we propose molecular structure models of the PHHC polymer molecules in the thin film at various temperatures.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2010
Kyeong Sik Jin; Su Ryon Shin; Byungcheol Ahn; Sangwoo Jin; Yecheol Rho; Heesoo Kim; Seon Jeong Kim; Moonhor Ree
The structural effects of fullerene on i-motif DNA were investigated by characterizing the structures of fullerene-free and fullerene-bound i-motif DNA, in the presence of cDNA and in solutions of varying pH, using circular dichroism and synchrotron small-angle X-ray scattering. To facilitate a direct structural comparison between the i-motif and duplex structures in response to pH stimulus, we developed atomic scale structural models for the duplex and i-motif DNA structures, and for the C(60)/i-motif DNA hybrid associated with the cDNA strand, assuming that the DNA strands are present in an ideal right-handed helical conformation. We found that fullerene shifted the pH-induced conformational transition between the i-motif and the duplex structure, possibly due to the hydrophobic interactions between the terminal fullerenes and between the terminal fullerenes and an internal TAA loop in the DNA strand. The hybrid structure showed a dramatic reduction in cyclic hysteresis.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2010
Sangwoo Jin; Tomoya Higashihara; Kyeong Sik Jin; Jinhwan Yoon; Yecheol Rho; Byungcheol Ahn; Jehan Kim; Akira Hirao; Moonhor Ree
We have synthesized well-defined multiarmed star polystyrenes, with 6, 9, 17, 33, and 57 arms, and studied their molecular shapes and structural characteristics in a good solvent (tetrahydrofuran at 25 degrees C) and in a theta (Theta) solvent (cyclohexane at 35 degrees C) by small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) using a synchrotron radiation source. Analysis of the SAXS data provided a detailed characterization of the molecular shapes, including the contributions of the blob morphology of the arms, the radius of gyration, the paired distance distribution, the radial electron density distribution, and the Zimm-Stockmayer and Roovers g-factor, for the multiarmed star polystyrenes. In particular, the molecular shapes of the star polystyrenes were found to change from a fuzzy ellipsoid, for the 6-armed polystyrene, to a fuzzy sphere, for the 57-armed polystyrene, with an increasing number of arms. The ellipsoidal character of the star polystyrenes with fewer arms may originate from the extended anisotropically branched architecture at the center of the molecule. The arms of the star polystyrenes were found to be more extended than those of the linear polystyrenes. Furthermore, the degree of chain extension in the arms increased with the number of arms.
Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2010
Myungeun Seo; Seonhee Shin; Sejin Ku; Sangwoo Jin; Jin-Baek Kim; Moonhor Ree; Sang Youl Kim
Vertically oriented cylindrical microdomains of block copolymer thin films consisting of polystyrene and poly(methyl methacrylate) were fabricated regardless of the substrate by introduction of a grafted architecture into the diblock copolymer chains. A series of comb-coil block copolymers, poly(methyl methacrylate)-b-poly(2-(2-bromopropionyloxy)-ethyl acrylate)-g-polystyrene (PMMA-b-PBPEA-g-PS) with various lengths of PS were synthesized by combination of reversible addition-fragmentation chain transfer (RAFT) polymerization and atom transfer radical polymerization (ATRP). When the volume fraction of PS was 75%, microphase separation produced cylindrical microdomains of PMMA surrounded by PS matrix in a thin film state after thermal annealing. Analysis of the thin films after subsequent etching of PMMA domains by atomic force microscopy, cross-sectional scanning electron microscope images and grazing incidence X-ray scattering measurements showed that the microdomains were oriented perpendicular to various substrates including metals, silicon, polymers, and even patterned surfaces. Steric repulsion between the grafted chains during the phase separation was attributed to the driving force for perpendicular orientation of the cylindrical microdomains without the aid of external fields.
Nanotechnology | 2006
Jinhwan Yoon; Kyuyoung Heo; Weontae Oh; Kyeong Sik Jin; Sangwoo Jin; Jehan Kim; Kwang-Woo Kim; Taihyun Chang; Moonhor Ree
The miscibility and the mechanism for thermal nanopore templating in films prepared from spin-coating and subsequent drying of homogenous solutions of curable polymethylsilsesquioxane dielectric precursor and thermally labile, reactive triethoxysilyl-terminated four-armed poly(epsilon-caprolactone) porogen were investigated in detail by in situ two-dimensional grazing incidence small-angle x-ray scattering analysis. The dielectric precursor and porogen components in the film were fully miscible. On heating, limited aggregations of the porogen, however, took place in only a small temperature range of 100-140 degrees C as a result of phase separation induced by the competition of the curing and hybridization reactions of the dielectric precursor and porogen; higher porogen loading resulted in relatively large porogen aggregates and a greater size distribution. The developed porogen aggregates underwent thermal firing above 300 degrees C without further growth and movement, and ultimately left their individual footprints in the film as spherical nanopores.
Macromolecular Research | 2008
Sangwoo Jin; Kyeong Sik Jin; Jinhwan Yoon; Kyuyoung Heo; Jehan Kim; Kwang-Woo Kim; Moonhor Ree; Tomoya Higashihara; Takumi Watanabe; Akira Hirao
We studied the molecular shapes and structural characteristics of a 33-armed, star polystyrene (PS-33A) and two 3rd-generation, dendrimer-like, star-branched poly(methyl methacrylate)s with different architectures (PMMA-G3a and PMMA-3Gb) and 32 end-branches under good solvent and theta (Θ) solvent conditions by using synchrotron small angle X-ray scattering (SAXS). The SAXS analyses were used to determine the structural details of the star PS and dendrimer-like, star-branched PMMA polymers. PS-33A had a fuzzy-spherical shape, whereas PMMA-G3a and PMMA-G3b had fuzzy-ellipsoidal shapes of similar size, despite their different chemical architectures. The star PS polymer’s arms were more extended than those of linear polystyrene. Furthermore, the branches of the dendrimer-like, star-branched polymers were more extended than those of the star PS polymer, despite having almost the same number of branches as PS-33A. The differences between the internal chain structures of these materials was attributed to their different chemical architectures.