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Dae-Chul Kim

Researcher at KAIST

Publications -  21
Citations -  395

Dae-Chul Kim is an academic researcher from KAIST. The author has contributed to research in topics: Catalysis & Chemistry. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 16 publications receiving 358 citations.

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Application of Spinel-Type Cobalt Chromite as a Novel Catalyst for Combustion of Chlorinated Organic Pollutants

TL;DR: Various chromium-containing catalysts were tested for the total oxidation of trichloroethylene (TCE) as a model reaction for the catalytic combustion of chlorinated organic pollutants to demonstrate higher activity and higher CO2 selectivity than traditional alumina supported chromia.
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Scalable functionalized graphene nano-platelets as tunable cathodes for high-performance lithium rechargeable batteries.

TL;DR: The simple, mass-scalable synthetic route for the functionalized graphene nano-platelets proposed in this work suggests that the graphene cathode can be a promising new class of electrode.
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Low-temperature deactivation and oxidation state of Pd/γ-Al2O3 catalysts for total oxidation of n-hexane

TL;DR: In this paper, a five weight percentage of Pd/γ-Al2O3 catalysts were used for the oxidation of n-hexane, and it was shown that the catalysts whose initial activities at lower temperatures were higher than the oxidized catalysts showed a gradual deactivation.
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Rapid, High-Resolution 3D Interference Printing of Multilevel Ultralong Nanochannel Arrays for High-Throughput Nanofluidic Transport.

TL;DR: 3D interference printing enables the single-step production of multilayered ultralong nanochannel arrays with nanoscale regularity, facilitating high-flux rheological platforms using nanocapillarity.
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Connected open structures from close-packed colloidal crystals by hyperthermal neutral beam etching.

TL;DR: Due to the charge neutrality of impinging gas molecules of the hyperthermal neutral beam, the spherical shape of polymer microspheres was almost maintained during the etching process and the inverse structures of such open structures were replicated by a simple room-temperature chemical vapor deposition and subsequently burning out polymer template spheres.