Network


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

Hotspot


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

Publication


Featured researches published by Seong-Joo Lee.


Applied Physics Letters | 2011

Effective cancellation of residual magnetic interference induced from a shielded environment for precision magnetic measurements

Seong-Min Hwang; Kiwoong Kim; Chan Seok Kang; Seong-Joo Lee; Yong-ho Lee

Using the method of inverse problem, we designed a cancellation coil that prevents a strong pulsed magnetic field inside a magnetically shielded room (MSR) from magnetizing and inducing large-scale eddy currents around the shielding materials. We implemented this coil with discrete current loops and evaluated it numerically and experimentally. Without the cancellation coil, the transient residual magnetic field in the middle of the MSR was greater than 0.1 μT for 63.5 ms, while the cancellation coil reduced it to less than 0.1 μT after 10.8 ms, shortening the decay time by 83.0%.


Applied Physics Letters | 2014

Type-I superconductor pick-up coil in superconducting quantum interference device-based ultra-low field nuclear magnetic resonance

Seong-Min Hwang; Ki Woong Kim; Kwon Kyu Yu; Seong-Joo Lee; Jeong Hyun Shim; Rainer Körber; Martin Burghoff

In ultra-low field nuclear magnetic resonance (ULF-NMR) with strong prepolarization field (Bp), type-II superconducting pick-up coils may be vulnerable to flux pinning from the strong Bp. Pick-up coils made of NbTi, Nb, and Pb were evaluated in terms of acquired NMR signal quality. The type-II pick-up coils showed degraded signals above 61 mT maximum exposure, while the Pb pick-up coil exhibited no such degradation. Furthermore, a negative counter pulse following a strong Bp was shown to follow magnetic hysteresis loop to unpin the trapped flux in the type-II pick-up coil and restore the NMR signal.


Superconductor Science and Technology | 2010

Pre-polarization enhancement by dynamic nuclear polarization in SQUID-based ultra-low-field nuclear magnetic resonance

Seong-Joo Lee; Kiwoong Kim; Chan Seok Kang; Seong-min Hwang; Yong-Ho Lee

We achieved enhanced pre-polarization in a superconducting quantum interference device (SQUID)-based microtesla nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) experiment by using dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP). The pre-polarization field is necessary to provide enough signal to noise to perform SQUID-based ultra-low-field (ULF) NMR/magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) experiments. However, it is quite tricky to deal with the strong transient magnetic field when operating the SQUID in a magnetically shielded room (MSR); besides the direct interference with the sensitive SQUID sensor, the strong magnetic field and its abrupt change generate magnetization in local areas in the MSR and eddy currents along the wall, which makes the NMR measurement difficult. The enhanced 1H NMR signals of water in TEMPOL and TEMPO solutions were obtained with a relatively weak radio-frequency (rf) field and double-relaxation oscillation SQUIDs (DROS) at a few mT pre-polarization fields. In our experimental condition, the enhancement factor was near ten in spite of the rf power far below the saturation in both samples.


Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2014

Two-dimensional NMR spectroscopy of 13C methanol at less than 5 μT

Jeong Hyun Shim; Seong-Joo Lee; Seong-min Hwang; Kwon-Kyu Yu; Kiwoong Kim

Two-dimensional (2D) spectroscopy is one of the most significant applications of nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR). Here, we demonstrate that the 2D NMR can be performed even at a low magnetic field of less than 5μT, which is ten times less than the Earths magnetic field. The pulses used in the experiment were composed of circularly polarized fields for coherent as well as wideband excitations. Since the excitation band covers the entire spectral range, the simplest two-pulse sequence delivered the full 2D spectrum. At 5μT, methanol with (13)C enriched up to 99% belongs to a strongly coupled regime, and thus its 2D spectrum exhibits complicated spectral correlations, which can be exploited as a fingerprint in chemical analysis. In addition, we show that, with compressive sensing, the acquisition of the 2D spectrum can be accelerated to take only 45% of the overall duration.


Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2014

Strong pulsed excitations using circularly polarized fields for ultra-low field NMR

Jeong Hyun Shim; Seong-Joo Lee; Kwon-Kyu Yu; Seong-min Hwang; Kiwoong Kim

A pulse, which is produced by a single coil and thereby has a linear polarization, cannot coherently drive nuclear spins if the pulse is stronger than the static field B0. The inaccuracy of the pulse, which arises from the failure of the rotating wave approximation, has been an obstacle in adopting multiple pulse techniques in ultra-low field NMR where B0 is less than a few μT. Here, we show that such a limitation can be overcome by applying pulses of circular polarization using two orthogonal coils. The sinusoidal nutation of the nuclear spins was experimentally obtained, which indicates that coherent and precise controls of the nuclear spins can be achieved with circularly polarized pulses. Additional demonstration of the Carl-Purcell-Meiboom-Gill sequence verifies the feasibility of adopting multiple pulse sequences to ultra-low field NMR studies.


NeuroImage | 2014

Toward a brain functional connectivity mapping modality by simultaneous imaging of coherent brainwaves

Kiwoong Kim; Seong-Joo Lee; Chan Seok Kang; Seong-min Hwang; Yong-Ho Lee; Kwon-Kyu Yu

Matching the proton-magnetic-resonance frequency to the frequency of a periodic neural oscillation (e.g., alpha or gamma band waves) by magnetic resonance imaging techniques, enables direct visualization of brain functional connectivity. Functional connectivity has been studied by analyzing the correlation between coherent neural oscillations in different areas of the brain. In electro- or magneto-encephalography, coherent source reconstruction in a source-space is very tricky due to power leaking from the correlation among the sources. For this reason, most studies have been limited to sensor-space analyses, which give doubtful results because of volume current mixing. The direct visualization of coherent brain oscillations can circumvent this problem. The feasibility of this idea was demonstrated by conducting phantom experiments with a SQUID-based, micro-Tesla NMR/MRI system. We introduce an experimental trick, an effective step-up of the measurement B-field in a pulse sequence, to decouple the magnetic resonance signal from the strong magneto-encephalographic signal at the same frequency.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2012

Evaluation of cancellation coil for precision magnetic measurements with strong prepolarization field inside shielded environment

Seong-Min Hwang; Kiwoong Kim; Chan Seok Kang; Seong-Joo Lee; Yong-ho Lee

Many precision magnetic measurements can benefit significantly from or even require strong prepolarization fields (Bp) and magnetically shielded environments. We describe here in detail a cancellation coil (CC) which can neutralize the Bp on the electrically conductive shield walls that may otherwise induce currents on the walls to produce a lingering transient residual field (Btr) inside the shielded environment and disrupt the measurement operations. The CC was designed using the inverse problem method to effectively neutralize magnetic fields generated on the shield walls by the Bp coil. The implemented CC was evaluated by measuring Btr using a fluxgate magnetometer at different magnetometer positions and cancellation coil currents (ICC). Multi-mode component analysis on the Btr measurements revealed two dominant components, where the component with shorter time constant comes from the current induced around the shield side walls and the other with longer time constant from the current induced on the c...


Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2015

Dynamic nuclear polarization in the hyperfine-field-dominant region

Seong-Joo Lee; Jeong Hyun Shim; Kiwoong Kim; Kwon Kyu Yu; Seong-min Hwang

Dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) allows measuring enhanced nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) signals. Though the efficiency of DNP has been known to increase at low fields, the usefulness of DNP has not been throughly investigated yet. Here, using a superconducting quantum interference device-based NMR system, we performed a series of DNP experiments with a nitroxide radical and measured DNP spectra at several magnetic fields down to sub-microtesla. In the DNP spectra, the large overlap of two peaks having opposite signs results in net enhancement factors, which are significantly lower than theoretical expectations and nearly invariant with respect to magnetic fields below the Earths field. The numerical analysis based on the radicals Hamiltonian provides qualitative explanations of such features. The net enhancement factor reached 325 at maximum experimentally, but our analysis reveals that the local enhancement factor at the center of the rf coil is 575, which is unaffected by detection schemes. We conclude that DNP in the hyperfine-field-dominant region yields sufficiently enhanced NMR signals at magnetic fields above 1 μT.


BioMed Research International | 2015

T 1 relaxation measurement of ex-vivo breast cancer tissues at ultralow magnetic fields.

Seong-Joo Lee; Jeong Hyun Shim; Ki Woong Kim; Seong-Min Hwang; Kwon Kyu Yu; Sanghyun Lim; Jae Ho Han; Hyunee Yim; Jang-Hee Kim; Yong Sik Jung; Ku Sang Kim

We investigated T 1 relaxations of ex-vivo cancer tissues at low magnetic fields in order to check the possibility of achieving a T 1 contrast higher than those obtained at high fields. The T 1 relaxations of fifteen pairs (normal and cancerous) of breast tissue samples were measured at three magnetic fields, 37, 62, and 122 μT, using our superconducting quantum interference device-based ultralow field nuclear magnetic resonance setup, optimally developed for ex-vivo tissue studies. A signal reconstruction based on Bayesian statistics for noise reduction was exploited to overcome the low signal-to-noise ratio. The ductal and lobular-type tissues did not exhibit meaningful T 1 contrast values between normal and cancerous tissues at the three different fields. On the other hand, an enhanced T 1 contrast was obtained for the mucinous cancer tissue.


Applied Physics Letters | 2015

Magnetic resonance imaging without field cycling at less than earth's magnetic field

Seong-Joo Lee; Jeong Hyun Shim; Kiwoong Kim; Kwon Kyu Yu; Seong-min Hwang

A strong pre-polarization field, usually tenths of a milli-tesla in magnitude, is used to increase the signal-to-noise ratio in ordinary superconducting quantum interference device-based nuclear magnetic resonance/magnetic resonance imaging experiments. Here, we introduce an experimental approach using two techniques to remove the need for the pre-polarization field. A dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) technique enables us to measure an enhanced resonance signal. In combination with a π/2 pulse to avoid the Bloch-Siegert effect in a micro-tesla field, we obtained an enhanced magnetic resonance image by using DNP technique with a 34.5 μT static external magnetic field without field cycling. In this approach, the problems of eddy current and flux trapping in the superconducting pickup coil, both due to the strong pre-polarization field, become negligible.

Collaboration


Dive into the Seong-Joo Lee's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kiwoong Kim

Korea Research Institute of Standards and Science

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Yong-Ho Lee

Korea Research Institute of Standards and Science

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Seong-Min Hwang

Korea Institute of Science and Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kwon Kyu Yu

Korea Research Institute of Standards and Science

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Seong-min Hwang

Korea Research Institute of Standards and Science

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kwon-Kyu Yu

Korea Research Institute of Standards and Science

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jeong Hyun Shim

Korea Research Institute of Standards and Science

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ki Woong Kim

Seoul National University Bundang Hospital

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Chan-Seok Kang

Korea Research Institute of Standards and Science

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge