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Jung Jun Bae

Researcher at Sungkyunkwan University

Publications -  37
Citations -  3000

Jung Jun Bae is an academic researcher from Sungkyunkwan University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Carbon nanotube & Graphene. The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 36 publications receiving 2613 citations.

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Thermal stability of graphite oxide

TL;DR: In this paper, the thermal stability of graphite oxides to heat treatment under ambient argon gas was investigated using X-ray diffraction, and it was found that the interlayer distances dropped off in a stepwise manner by approximately 0.1nm in relation to the annealing time.
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Influence of Copper Morphology in Forming Nucleation Seeds for Graphene Growth

TL;DR: Although the best monolayer graphene was grown from polished Cu with a low sheet resistance of 260 Ω/sq, a small portion of multilayers were also formed near the impurity particles or locally protruded parts.
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Transferred wrinkled Al2O3 for highly stretchable and transparent graphene–carbon nanotube transistors

TL;DR: The fabrication of highly stretchable and transparent field-effect transistors combining graphene/single-walled carbon nanotube (SWCNT) electrodes and a SWCNT-network channel with a geometrically wrinkled inorganic dielectric layer that retained performance under strains as high as 20% without appreciable leakage current increases or physical degradation is reported.
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Fermi Level Engineering of Single-Walled Carbon Nanotubes by AuCl3 Doping

TL;DR: It is proposed that this large work function shift forces the Fermi level of the SWCNTs to be located deep in the valence band, i.e., highly degenerate, creating empty van Hove singularity states, and hence the work functionshift invokes a new asymmetric transition in the absorption spectroscopy from a deeper level to newly generated empty states.
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Heat Dissipation of Transparent Graphene Defoggers

TL;DR: In this article, the authors measured the dynamic response of the temperature as a function of input electrical power and found that the response time of the graphene/glass defogger is shorter by 44% than that of the conventional glass defoggers.