Suk Won Hwang
Korea University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Suk Won Hwang.
Nature Neuroscience | 2011
Jonathan Viventi; Dae-Hyeong Kim; Leif Vigeland; Eric S. Frechette; Justin A. Blanco; Yun Soung Kim; Andrew E. Avrin; Vineet R. Tiruvadi; Suk Won Hwang; Ann C. Vanleer; Drausin Wulsin; Kathryn A. Davis; Casey E. Gelber; Larry A. Palmer; Jan Van der Spiegel; Jian Wu; Jianliang Xiao; Yonggang Huang; Diego Contreras; John A. Rogers; Brian Litt
Arrays of electrodes for recording and stimulating the brain are used throughout clinical medicine and basic neuroscience research, yet are unable to sample large areas of the brain while maintaining high spatial resolution because of the need to individually wire each passive sensor at the electrode-tissue interface. To overcome this constraint, we developed new devices that integrate ultrathin and flexible silicon nanomembrane transistors into the electrode array, enabling new dense arrays of thousands of amplified and multiplexed sensors that are connected using fewer wires. We used this system to record spatial properties of cat brain activity in vivo, including sleep spindles, single-trial visual evoked responses and electrographic seizures. We found that seizures may manifest as recurrent spiral waves that propagate in the neocortex. The developments reported here herald a new generation of diagnostic and therapeutic brain-machine interface devices.
Science | 2012
Suk Won Hwang; Hu Tao; Dae-Hyeong Kim; Huanyu Cheng; Jun Kyul Song; Elliott Rill; Mark A. Brenckle; Bruce Panilaitis; Sang Min Won; Yun Soung Kim; Young Min Song; Ki Jun Yu; Abid Ameen; Rui Li; Yewang Su; Miaomiao Yang; David L. Kaplan; Mitchell R. Zakin; Marvin J. Slepian; Yonggang Huang; Fiorenzo G. Omenetto; John A. Rogers
Reversible Implants Silicon electronics are generally designed to be stable and robust—it would be counterproductive if the key parts of your computer or cell phone slowly dissolved away while you were using it. In order to develop transient electronics for use as medical implants, Hwang et al. (p. 1640, see the cover) produced a complete set of tools and materials that would be needed to make standard devices. Devices were designed to have a specific lifetime, after which the component materials, such as porous silicon and silk, would be resorbed by the body. A platform of materials and fabrication methods furnishes resorbable electronic devices for in vivo use. A remarkable feature of modern silicon electronics is its ability to remain physically invariant, almost indefinitely for practical purposes. Although this characteristic is a hallmark of applications of integrated circuits that exist today, there might be opportunities for systems that offer the opposite behavior, such as implantable devices that function for medically useful time frames but then completely disappear via resorption by the body. We report a set of materials, manufacturing schemes, device components, and theoretical design tools for a silicon-based complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) technology that has this type of transient behavior, together with integrated sensors, actuators, power supply systems, and wireless control strategies. An implantable transient device that acts as a programmable nonantibiotic bacteriocide provides a system-level example.
Nature | 2016
Seung-Kyun Kang; Rory K.J. Murphy; Suk Won Hwang; Seung Min Lee; Daniel V. Harburg; Neil A. Krueger; Jiho Shin; Paul Gamble; Huanyu Cheng; Sooyoun Yu; Zhuangjian Liu; Jordan G. McCall; Manu Stephen; Hanze Ying; Jeonghyun Kim; Gayoung Park; R. Chad Webb; Chi Hwan Lee; Sangjin Chung; Dae Seung Wie; Amit D. Gujar; Bharat Vemulapalli; Albert H. Kim; Kyung Mi Lee; Jianjun Cheng; Younggang Huang; Sang Hoon Lee; Paul V. Braun; Wilson Z. Ray; John A. Rogers
Many procedures in modern clinical medicine rely on the use of electronic implants in treating conditions that range from acute coronary events to traumatic injury. However, standard permanent electronic hardware acts as a nidus for infection: bacteria form biofilms along percutaneous wires, or seed haematogenously, with the potential to migrate within the body and to provoke immune-mediated pathological tissue reactions. The associated surgical retrieval procedures, meanwhile, subject patients to the distress associated with re-operation and expose them to additional complications. Here, we report materials, device architectures, integration strategies, and in vivo demonstrations in rats of implantable, multifunctional silicon sensors for the brain, for which all of the constituent materials naturally resorb via hydrolysis and/or metabolic action, eliminating the need for extraction. Continuous monitoring of intracranial pressure and temperature illustrates functionality essential to the treatment of traumatic brain injury; the measurement performance of our resorbable devices compares favourably with that of non-resorbable clinical standards. In our experiments, insulated percutaneous wires connect to an externally mounted, miniaturized wireless potentiostat for data transmission. In a separate set-up, we connect a sensor to an implanted (but only partially resorbable) data-communication system, proving the principle that there is no need for any percutaneous wiring. The devices can be adapted to sense fluid flow, motion, pH or thermal characteristics, in formats that are compatible with the body’s abdomen and extremities, as well as the deep brain, suggesting that the sensors might meet many needs in clinical medicine.
Small | 2013
Canan Dagdeviren; Suk Won Hwang; Yewang Su; Stanley Kim; Huanyu Cheng; Onur Gur; Ryan Haney; Fiorenzo G. Omenetto; Yonggang Huang; John A. Rogers
The combined use of ZnO, Mg, MgO, and silk provides routes to classes of thin-film transistors and mechanical energy harvesters that are soluble in water and biofluids. Experimental and theoretical studies of the operational aspects and dissolution properties of this type of transient electronics technology illustrate its various capabilities. Application opportunities range from resorbable biomedical implants, to environmentally dissolvable sensors, and degradable consumer electronics.
Advanced Materials | 2014
Suk Won Hwang; Jun Kyul Song; Xian Huang; Huanyu Cheng; Seung-Kyun Kang; Bong Hoon Kim; Jae Hwan Kim; Sooyoun Yu; Yonggang Huang; John A. Rogers
Dr. S.-W. Hwang, J.-K. Song, Dr. X. Huang, Dr. S.-K. Kang, Dr. B. H. Kim, J.-H. Kim Department of Materials Science and Engineering and Frederick Seitz Materials Research Laboratory University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana IL 61801 , USA H. Cheng, Prof. Y. Huang Department of Mechanical Engineering Civil and Environmental Engineering Center for Engineering and Health and Skin Disease Research Center Northwestern University, Evanston IL 60208 , USA S. Yu Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana IL 61801 , USA Prof. J. A. Rogers Department of Materials Sicience and Engineering Chemistry, Mechanical Science and Engineering Electrical and Computer Engineering Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology and Frederick Seitz Materials research Laboratory University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana IL 61801 , USA E-mail: [email protected]
Advanced Materials | 2013
Suk Won Hwang; Xian Huang; Jung Hun Seo; Jun Kyul Song; Stanley Kim; Sami Hage-Ali; Hyun-Joong Chung; Hu Tao; Fiorenzo G. Omenetto; Zhenqiang Ma; John A. Rogers
Materials, device designs and manufacturing approaches are presented for classes of RF electronic components that are capable of complete dissolution in water or biofluids. All individual passive/active components as well as system-level examples such as wireless RF energy harvesting circuits exploit active materials that are biocompatible. The results provide diverse building blocks for physically transient forms of electronics, of particular potential value in bioresorbable medical implants with wireless power transmission and communication capabilities.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014
Hu Tao; Suk Won Hwang; Benedetto Marelli; Bo An; Jodie E. Moreau; Miaomiao Yang; Mark A. Brenckle; Stanley Kim; David L. Kaplan; John A. Rogers; Fiorenzo G. Omenetto
Significance We present the demonstration of in vivo operation of a subcutaneously implanted, resorbable electronic device. The remotely controlled device was wirelessly activated after implantation, successfully eliminating infection, and subsequently dissolving in the surrounding tissue. This approach is a first step for the development of a class of implantable, technological, biomedical devices that resorb harmlessly, eliminating the need for retrieval after use. A paradigm shift for implantable medical devices lies at the confluence between regenerative medicine, where materials remodel and integrate in the biological milieu, and technology, through the use of recently developed material platforms based on biomaterials and bioresorbable technologies such as optics and electronics. The union of materials and technology in this context enables a class of biomedical devices that can be optically or electronically functional and yet harmlessly degrade once their use is complete. We present here a fully degradable, remotely controlled, implantable therapeutic device operating in vivo to counter a Staphylococcus aureus infection that disappears once its function is complete. This class of device provides fully resorbable packaging and electronics that can be turned on remotely, after implantation, to provide the necessary thermal therapy or trigger drug delivery. Such externally controllable, resorbable devices not only obviate the need for secondary surgeries and retrieval, but also have extended utility as therapeutic devices that can be left behind at a surgical or suturing site, following intervention, and can be externally controlled to allow for infection management by either thermal treatment or by remote triggering of drug release when there is retardation of antibiotic diffusion, deep infections are present, or when systemic antibiotic treatment alone is insufficient due to the emergence of antibiotic-resistant strains. After completion of function, the device is safely resorbed into the body, within a programmable period.
Nature Materials | 2016
Ki Jun Yu; Duygu Kuzum; Suk Won Hwang; Bong Hoon Kim; Halvor Juul; Nam Heon Kim; Sang Min Won; Ken Chiang; Michael Trumpis; Andrew G. Richardson; Huanyu Cheng; Hui Fang; Marissa Thompson; Hank Bink; Delia Talos; Kyung Jin Seo; Hee Nam Lee; Seung-Kyun Kang; Jae Hwan Kim; Jung Yup Lee; Younggang Huang; Frances E. Jensen; Marc A. Dichter; Timothy H. Lucas; Jonathan Viventi; Brian Litt; John A. Rogers
Bioresorbable silicon electronics technology offers unprecedented opportunities to deploy advanced implantable monitoring systems that eliminate risks, cost and discomfort associated with surgical extraction. Applications include post-operative monitoring and transient physiologic recording after percutaneous or minimally invasive placement of vascular, cardiac, orthopedic, neural or other devices. We present an embodiment of these materials in both passive and actively addressed arrays of bioresorbable silicon electrodes with multiplexing capabilities, that record in vivo electrophysiological signals from the cortical surface and the subgaleal space. The devices detect normal physiologic and epileptiform activity, both in acute and chronic recordings. Comparative studies show sensor performance comparable to standard clinical systems and reduced tissue reactivity relative to conventional clinical electrocorticography (ECoG) electrodes. This technology offers general applicability in neural interfaces, with additional potential utility in treatment of disorders where transient monitoring and modulation of physiologic function, implant integrity and tissue recovery or regeneration are required.
Nano Letters | 2015
Suk Won Hwang; Chi Hwan Lee; Huanyu Cheng; Jae Woong Jeong; Seung-Kyun Kang; Jae Hwan Kim; Jiho Shin; Jian Yang; Zhuangjian Liu; Guillermo A. Ameer; Yonggang Huang; John A. Rogers
Transient electronics represents an emerging class of technology that exploits materials and/or device constructs that are capable of physically disappearing or disintegrating in a controlled manner at programmed rates or times. Inorganic semiconductor nanomaterials such as silicon nanomembranes/nanoribbons provide attractive choices for active elements in transistors, diodes and other essential components of overall systems that dissolve completely by hydrolysis in biofluids or groundwater. We describe here materials, mechanics, and design layouts to achieve this type of technology in stretchable configurations with biodegradable elastomers for substrate/encapsulation layers. Experimental and theoretical results illuminate the mechanical properties under large strain deformation. Circuit characterization of complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor inverters and individual transistors under various levels of applied loads validates the design strategies. Examples of biosensors demonstrate possibilities for stretchable, transient devices in biomedical applications.
Advanced Materials | 2014
Suk Won Hwang; Gayoung Park; Huanyu Cheng; Jun Kyul Song; Seung-Kyun Kang; Lan Yin; Jae Hwan Kim; Fiorenzo G. Omenetto; Yonggang Huang; Kyung Mi Lee; John A. Rogers
We review recent progress in a class of silicon-based electronics that is capable of complete, controlled dissolution when immersed in water or bio-fluids. This type of technology, referred to in a broader sense as transient electronics, has potential applications in resorbable biomedical devices, eco-friendly electronics, environmental sensors, secure hardware systems and others. New results reported here include studies of the kinetics of hydrolysis of nanomembranes of single crystalline silicon in bio-fluids and aqueous solutions at various pH levels and temperatures. Evaluations of toxicity using live animal models and test coupons of transient electronic materials provide some evidence of their biocompatibility, thereby suggesting potential for use in bioresorbable electronic implants.