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Dive into the research topics where Youngwoo Choo is active.

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Featured researches published by Youngwoo Choo.


ACS Nano | 2014

Scalable fabrication of polymer membranes with vertically aligned 1 nm pores by magnetic field directed self-Assembly

Xunda Feng; Marissa E. Tousley; Matthew G. Cowan; Brian R. Wiesenauer; Siamak Nejati; Youngwoo Choo; Richard D. Noble; Menachem Elimelech; Douglas L. Gin; Chinedum O. Osuji

There is long-standing interest in developing membranes possessing uniform pores with dimensions in the range of 1 nm and physical continuity in the macroscopic transport direction to meet the needs of challenging small molecule and ionic separations. Here we report facile, scalabe fabrication of polymer membranes with vertically (i.e., along the through-plane direction) aligned 1 nm pores by magnetic-field alignment and subsequent cross-linking of a liquid crystalline mesophase. We utilize a wedge-shaped amphiphilic species as the building block of a thermotropic columnar mesophase with 1 nm ionic nanochannels, and leverage the magnetic anisotropy of the amphiphile to control the alignment of these pores with a magnetic field. In situ X-ray scattering and subsequent optical microscopy reveal the formation of highly ordered nanostructured mesophases and cross-linked polymer films with orientational order parameters of ca. 0.95. High-resolution transmission electron microscopy (TEM) imaging provides direct visualization of long-range persistence of vertically aligned, hexagonally packed nanopores in unprecedented detail, demonstrating high-fidelity retention of structure and alignment after photo-cross-linking. Ionic conductivity measurements on the aligned membranes show a remarkable 85-fold enhancement of conductivity over nonaligned samples. These results provide a path to achieving the large area control of morphology and related enhancement of properties required for high-performance membranes and other applications.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Order-disorder transition and alignment dynamics of a block copolymer under high magnetic fields by in situ x-ray scattering.

Manesh Gopinadhan; Pawel W. Majewski; Youngwoo Choo; Chinedum O. Osuji

We examine the influence of magnetic fields on the order-disorder transition (ODT) in a liquid crystalline block copolymer. This is motivated by a desire to understand the dynamics of microstructure alignment during field annealing as potentially dictated by selective destabilization of nonaligned material. Temperature resolved scattering across the ODT and time-resolved measurements during isothermal field annealing at sub-ODT temperatures were performed in situ. Strongly textured mesophases resulted in each case but no measurable field-induced shift in T(ODT) was observed. This suggests that selective melting does not play a discernable role in the systems field response. Our data indicate instead that alignment occurs by slow grain rotation within the mesophase. We identify an optimum subcooling that maximizes alignment during isothermal field annealing. This is corroborated by a simple model incorporating the competing effects of an exponentially decreasing mobility and divergent, increasing magnetic anisotropy on cooling below T(ODT). The absence of measurable field effects on T(ODT) is consistent with estimates based on the relative magnitudes of the field interaction energy and the enthalpy associated with the ODT.


Advanced Materials | 2014

Thermally Switchable Aligned Nanopores by Magnetic‐Field Directed Self‐Assembly of Block Copolymers

Manesh Gopinadhan; Prashant Deshmukh; Youngwoo Choo; Pawel W. Majewski; Olgica Bakajin; Menachem Elimelech; Rajeswari M. Kasi; Chinedum O. Osuji

A scalable approach for developing large area polymer films, with stimuli responsive vertically aligned nanopores is reported. Magnetic fields are used to create highly aligned hexagonally packed block copolymer cylindrical microdomains with order parameters exceeding 0.95. Selective etch removal of material yields nanoporous films which demonstrate reversible pore closure on heating.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2015

Elements Provide a Clue: Nanoscale Characterization of Thin-Film Composite Polyamide Membranes

Xinglin Lu; Siamak Nejati; Youngwoo Choo; Chinedum O. Osuji; Jun Ma; Menachem Elimelech

In this study, we exploit the nitrogen-sulfur elemental contrast of thin-film composite (TFC) polyamide membranes and present, for the first time, the application of two elemental analysis techniques, scanning transmission electron microscopy-energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (STEM-EDX) and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) C60+ ion-beam sputtering, to elucidate the nanoscale structure and chemical composition of the polyamide-polysulfone interface. Although STEM-EDX elemental mapping depicts the presence of a dense polyamide layer at the interface, it is incapable of resolving the elemental contrast at nanoscale resolution at the interfacial zone. Depth-resolved XPS C60+ ion-beam sputtering enabled nanoscale characterization of the polyamide-polysulfone interface and revealed the presence of a heterogeneous layer that contains both polyamide and polysulfone signatures. Our results have important implications for future studies to elucidate the structure-property-performance relationship of TFC membranes.


ACS Macro Letters | 2016

Strong Orientational Coupling of Block Copolymer Microdomains to Smectic Layering Revealed by Magnetic Field Alignment

Manesh Gopinadhan; Youngwoo Choo; Chinedum O. Osuji

We elucidate the roles of the isotropic-nematic (I-N) and nematic-smectic A (N-SmA) transitions in magnetic field directed self-assembly of a liquid crystalline block copolymer (BCP), using \textit{in situ} x-ray scattering. Cooling into the nematic from the disordered melt yields poorly ordered and weakly aligned BCP microdomains. Continued cooling into the SmA however results in an abrupt increase in BCP orientational order with microdomain alignment tightly coupled to the translational order parameter of the smectic layers. These results underscore the significance of the N-SmA transition in generating highly aligned states under magnetic fields in these hierarchically ordered materials.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017

Controlling orientational order in block copolymers using low-intensity magnetic fields

Manesh Gopinadhan; Youngwoo Choo; Kohsuke Kawabata; Gilad Kaufman; Xunda Feng; Xiaojun Di; Yekaterina Rokhlenko; Lalit H. Mahajan; Dennis Ndaya; Rajeswari M. Kasi; Chinedum O. Osuji

Significance Magnetic field interactions with condensed matter can produce orientationally ordered states that are important for fundamental research and technological applications. Block copolymer (BCP) mesophases typically exhibit weak field coupling, requiring high-intensity fields generated by superconducting magnets to produce such states. This work advances a strategy for circumventing such field intensity limitations and creates highly aligned mesophases using fields an order of magnitude smaller than typically required and that can be produced by simple permanent magnets. We elucidate the roles of molecular mobility, grain size, and ordering kinetics on the mesophase field response. Low-intensity field-directed BCP ordering has potentially profound implications for processing functional materials and developing complex textures by field shaping. The interaction of fields with condensed matter during phase transitions produces a rich variety of physical phenomena. Self-assembly of liquid crystalline block copolymers (LC BCPs) in the presence of a magnetic field, for example, can result in highly oriented microstructures due to the LC BCP’s anisotropic magnetic susceptibility. We show that such oriented mesophases can be produced using low-intensity fields (<0.5 T) that are accessible using permanent magnets, in contrast to the high fields (>4 T) and superconducting magnets required to date. Low-intensity field alignment is enabled by the addition of labile mesogens that coassemble with the system’s nematic and smectic A mesophases. The alignment saturation field strength and alignment kinetics have pronounced dependences on the free mesogen concentration. Highly aligned states with orientation distribution coefficients close to unity were obtained at fields as small as 0.2 T. This remarkable field response originates in an enhancement of alignment kinetics due to a reduction in viscosity, and increased magnetostatic energy due to increases in grain size, in the presence of labile mesogens. These developments provide routes for controlling structural order in BCPs, including the possibility of producing nontrivial textures and patterns of alignment by locally screening fields using magnetic nanoparticles.


Molecular Systems Design & Engineering | 2017

Directing block copolymer self-assembly with permanent magnets: photopatterning microdomain alignment and generating oriented nanopores

Manesh Gopinadhan; Youngwoo Choo; Lalit H. Mahajan; Dennis Ndaya; Gilad Kaufman; Yekaterina Rokhlenko; Rajeswari M. Kasi; Chinedum O. Osuji

Magnetic fields are useful for directing block copolymer (BCP) self-assembly, but to date such a field alignment has required large fields (>5 T) necessitating the use of superconducting magnets. We report an approach that circumvents this limitation by introducing labile reactive mesogens into a liquid crystalline (LC) BCP based on a norbornene backbone with a poly(lactide) minority block that forms hexagonally packed cylinders. The free mesogens co-assemble with the smectic A mesophase of the BCP and enable alignment at fields as low as 0.5 T. The remarkable field response originates from the combined effects of enhanced mobility and decreased segregation strength, and the presence of large micron-scale grains in the system. We demonstrate a robust alignment of mesogen-blended samples using simple permanent magnets. The etching of poly(lactide) yields nanoporous films, while the spatially selective microdomain immobilization by UV-induced crosslinking through a photomask provides a versatile mechanism for creating alignment patterns. We anticipate that the nanoporous materials as generated here may find application in membrane fabrication or BCP lithography, while the ability to spatially pattern alignment is promising for the design of mechanical metamaterials exploiting the shape memory effect of LC elastomers.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2018

High Performance Nanofiltration Membrane for Effective Removal of Perfluoroalkyl Substances at High Water Recovery

Chanhee Boo; Yunkun Wang; Ines Zucker; Youngwoo Choo; Chinedum O. Osuji; Menachem Elimelech

We demonstrate the fabrication of a loose, negatively charged nanofiltration (NF) membrane with tailored selectivity for the removal of perfluoroalkyl substances with reduced scaling potential. A selective polyamide layer was fabricated on top of a poly(ether sulfone) support via interfacial polymerization of trimesoyl chloride and a mixture of piperazine and bipiperidine. Incorporating high molecular weight bipiperidine during the interfacial polymerization enables the formation of a loose, nanoporous selective layer structure. The fabricated NF membrane possessed a negative surface charge and had a pore diameter of ∼1.2 nm, much larger than a widely used commercial NF membrane (i.e., NF270 with pore diameter of ∼0.8 nm). We evaluated the performance of the fabricated NF membrane for the rejection of different salts (i.e., NaCl, CaCl2, and Na2SO4) and perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA). The fabricated NF membrane exhibited a high retention of PFOA (∼90%) while allowing high passage of scale-forming cations (i.e., calcium). We further performed gypsum scaling experiments to demonstrate lower scaling potential of the fabricated loose porous NF membrane compared to NF membranes having a dense selective layer under solution conditions simulating high water recovery. Our results demonstrate that properly designed NF membranes are a critical component of a high recovery NF system, which provide an efficient and sustainable solution for remediation of groundwater contaminated with perfluoroalkyl substances.


Angewandte Chemie | 2018

Janus Graft Block Copolymers: Design of a Polymer Architecture for Independently Tuned Nanostructures and Polymer Properties

Zi‐Hao Guo; An N. Le; Xunda Feng; Youngwoo Choo; Bingqian Liu; Danyu Wang; Zhengyi Wan; Yuwei Gu; Julia Zhao; Vince Li; Chinedum O. Osuji; Jeremiah A. Johnson; Mingjiang Zhong

The graft-through synthesis of Janus graft block copolymers (GBCPs) from branched macromonomers composed of various combinations of homopolymers is presented. Self-assembly of GBCPs resulted in ordered nanostructures with ultra-small domain sizes down to 2.8 nm (half-pitch). The grafted architecture introduces an additional parameter, the backbone length, which enables control over the thermomechanical properties and processability of the GBCPs independently of their self-assembled nanostructures. The simple synthetic route to GBCPs and the possibility of using a variety of polymer combinations contribute to the universality of this technique.


Langmuir | 2017

Flat Drops, Elastic Sheets, and Microcapsules by Interfacial Assembly of a Bacterial Biofilm Protein, BslA

Gilad Kaufman; Wei Liu; Danielle M. Williams; Youngwoo Choo; Manesh Gopinadhan; Niveditha Samudrala; Raphael Sarfati; Elsa C. Y. Yan; Lynne Regan; Chinedum O. Osuji

Protein adsorption and assembly at interfaces provide a potentially versatile route to create useful constructs for fluid compartmentalization. In this context, we consider the interfacial assembly of a bacterial biofilm protein, BslA, at air-water and oil-water interfaces. Densely packed, high modulus monolayers form at air-water interfaces, leading to the formation of flattened sessile water drops. BslA forms elastic sheets at oil-water interfaces, leading to the production of stable monodisperse oil-in-water microcapsules. By contrast, water-in-oil microcapsules are unstable but display arrested rather than full coalescence on contact. The disparity in stability likely originates from a low areal density of BslA hydrophobic caps on the exterior surface of water-in-oil microcapsules, relative to the inverse case. In direct analogy with small molecule surfactants, the lack of stability of individual water-in-oil microcapsules is consistent with the large value of the hydrophilic-lipophilic balance (HLB number) calculated based on the BslA crystal structure. The occurrence of arrested coalescence indicates that the surface activity of BslA is similar to that of colloidal particles that produce Pickering emulsions, with the stability of partially coalesced structures ensured by interfacial jamming. Micropipette aspiration and flow in tapered capillaries experiments reveal intriguing reversible and nonreversible modes of mechanical deformation, respectively. The mechanical robustness of the microcapsules and the ability to engineer their shape and to design highly specific binding responses through protein engineering suggest that these microcapsules may be useful for biomedical applications.

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Dennis Ndaya

University of Connecticut

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