Yeseul Kim
Sungkyunkwan University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Yeseul Kim.
Scientific Reports | 2016
Kun Cho; In Gyu Hwang; Yeseul Kim; Su Jin Lim; Jun Lim; Joon Heon Kim; Bopil Gim; Byung Mook Weon
Capillary bridges are usually formed by a small liquid volume in a confined space between two solid surfaces. They can have a lower internal pressure than the surrounding pressure for volumes of the order of femtoliters. Femtoliter capillary bridges with relatively rapid evaporation rates are difficult to explore experimentally. To understand in detail the evaporation of femtoliter capillary bridges, we present a feasible experimental method to directly visualize how water bridges evaporate between a microsphere and a flat substrate in still air using transmission X-ray microscopy. Precise measurements of evaporation rates for water bridges show that lower water pressure than surrounding pressure can significantly decrease evaporation through the suppression of vapor diffusion. This finding provides insight into the evaporation of ultrasmall capillary bridges.
Advanced Materials | 2018
Seon Ju Yeo; Min Jun Oh; Hyun Min Jun; Min Hwan Lee; Jung Gun Bae; Yeseul Kim; Kyung Jin Park; Seungwoo Lee; Daeyeon Lee; Byung Mook Weon; Won Bo Lee; Seok Joon Kwon; Pil J. Yoo
Advanced materials with low density and high strength impose transformative impacts in the construction, aerospace, and automobile industries. These materials can be realized by assembling well-designed modular building units (BUs) into interconnected structures. This study uses a hierarchical design strategy to demonstrate a new class of carbon-based, ultralight, strong, and even superelastic closed-cellular network structures. Here, the BUs are prepared by a multiscale design approach starting from the controlled synthesis of functionalized graphene oxide nanosheets at the molecular- and nanoscale, leading to the microfluidic fabrication of spherical solid-shelled bubbles at the microscale. Then, bubbles are strategically assembled into centimeter-scale 3D structures. Subsequently, these structures are transformed into self-interconnected and structurally reinforced closed-cellular network structures with plesiohedral cellular units through post-treatment, resulting in the generation of 3D graphene lattices with rhombic dodecahedral honeycomb structure at the centimeter-scale. The 3D graphene suprastructure concurrently exhibits the Youngs modulus above 300 kPa while retaining a light density of 7.7 mg cm-3 and sustaining the elasticity against up to 87% of the compressive strain benefiting from efficient stress dissipation through the complete space-filling closed-cellular network. The method of fabricating the 3D graphene closed-cellular structure opens a new pathway for designing lightweight, strong, and superelastic materials.
Chemical Engineering Journal | 2014
Hyeongjin Lee; Heon Hwang; Yeseul Kim; HoJun Jeon; GeunHyung Kim
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2018
Su Jin Lim; Donggyu Kim; Yeseul Kim; Hee Kyeong Park; Suyeon Jeong; Changhyun Pang; Seunghwa Ryu; Byung Mook Weon
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2018
Yeseul Kim; Jun Lim; Byung Mook Weon
arXiv: Physics and Society | 2016
Yeseul Kim; Kun Cho; Byung Mook Weon
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2016
Yeseul Kim; Su Jin Lim; Kun Cho; Byung Mook Weon
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2016
Kun Cho; Yeseul Kim; Jun Lim; Joon Heon Kim; Byung Mook Weon
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2016
Su Jin Lim; Yeseul Kim; Suyeon Jeong; Changhyun Pang; Byung Mook Weon
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2015
Kun Cho; In Gyu Hwang; Yeseul Kim; Su Jin Lim; Jun Lim; Joon Heon Kim; Bopil Gim; Jung Gu Kim; Byung Mook Weon