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Dong Han Seo

Researcher at University of Technology, Sydney

Publications -  63
Citations -  2550

Dong Han Seo is an academic researcher from University of Technology, Sydney. The author has contributed to research in topics: Graphene & Membrane. The author has an hindex of 24, co-authored 59 publications receiving 1834 citations. Previous affiliations of Dong Han Seo include Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation & University of Sydney.

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Structure-Controlled, Vertical Graphene-Based, Binder-Free Electrodes from Plasma-Reformed Butter Enhance Supercapacitor Performance

TL;DR: In this paper, a single-step, fast, scalable, and environmentally-benign plasma-enabled method was used to fabricate VGNS using cheap and spreadable natural fatty precursor butter, and demonstrate the controllability over the degree of graphitization and the density of VGNS edge planes.
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Control of morphology and electrical properties of self-organized graphenes in a plasma

TL;DR: In this article, the possibility of effective control of morphology and electrical properties of self-organized graphene structures on plasma-exposed Si surfaces is demonstrated, which can be grown without any catalyst and any external heating upon direct contact with high-density inductively coupled plasmas at surface temperatures not exceeding 673-723 K.
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Semiconductor photothermal materials enabling efficient solar steam generation toward desalination and wastewater treatment

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors highlight the progress and prospects in solar steam generation (SSG) with emphasis on the use and evolution of advanced semiconductor materials for PTMs and their various designs and engineered architectures.
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Single-step ambient-air synthesis of graphene from renewable precursors as electrochemical genosensor.

TL;DR: The ambient-air environment is exploited to enable the growth of graphene films, without the need for compressed gases, and the functionality of the graphene is demonstrated through direct utilization as an electrode to realize an effective electrochemical genosensor.