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Kisung Kang

Bio: Kisung Kang is an academic researcher from Yonsei University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Antiferromagnetism & Physics. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 10 publications receiving 86 citations.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a review of the properties of metallic antiferromagnetic materials is presented, where the metallic conductivity provides unique perspectives for the practical use and fundamental properties of the materials.
Abstract: Antiferromagnet materials have recently gained renewed interest due to their possible use in spintronics technologies, where spin transport is the foundation of their functionalities. In that respect metallic antiferromagnets are of particular interest, since they enable complex interplays between electronic charge transport, spin, optical, and magnetization dynamics. Here we review phenomena where the metallic conductivity provides unique perspectives for the practical use and fundamental properties of antiferromagnetic materials.

68 citations

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TL;DR: In this article, the authors combine transient measurements of optical reflectivity and birefringence to study the linear optical response of Fe$2}$As to small ultrafast temperature excursions.
Abstract: The linear magneto-optical Kerr effect (MOKE) is often used to probe magnetism of ferromagnetic materials, but MOKE cannot be applied to collinear antiferromagnets (AFs) due to the cancellation of sub-lattice magnetization. Magneto-optical constants that are quadratic in magnetization, however, provide an approach for studying AFs on picosecond time scales. Here, we combine transient measurements of optical reflectivity and birefringence to study the linear optical response of Fe$_{2}$As to small ultrafast temperature excursions. We performed temperature dependent pump-probe measurements on crystallographically isotropic (001) and anisotropic (010) faces of Fe$_{2}$As bulk crystals. We find the largest optical signals arise from changes in the index of refraction along the $z$-axis, i.e. perpendicular to the N\'eel vector. Both real and imaginary parts of the time-resolved optical birefringence rotation signal approximately follow the temperature dependence of the magnetic heat capacity, as expected if the changes in dielectric constants are dominated by contributions of exchange interactions to the dielectric constant. We conclude that under our experimental conditions, changes in the exchange interaction contribute more strongly to the temperature dependence of the magneto-optic constants than the Voigt effect.

16 citations

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TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the temperature-dependent energy and electronic structure of single-layered two-dimensional phosphorene with various fault line defects, and showed how these low-energy line defects could well modulate the electronic band gap energies.
Abstract: Systematic engineering of atomic-scale low-dimensional defects in two-dimensional nanomaterials is a promising method to modulate the electronic properties of these nanomaterials. Defects at interfaces such as grain boundaries and line defects can often be detrimental to technologically important nanodevice operations and thus a fundamental understanding of how such one-dimensional defects may have an influence on their physio-chemical properties is pivotal for optimizing their device performance. Of late, two-dimensional phosphorene has attracted much attention due to its high carrier mobility and good mechanical flexibility. In this study, using density-functional theory, we have investigated the temperature-dependent energetics and electronic structure of single-layered phosphorene with various fault line defects. We have generated different line defect models based on a fault method, rather than the conventional rotation method. This has allowed us to study and identify new low-energy line defects, and we show how these low-energy line defects could well modulate the electronic band gap energies of single-layered two-dimensional phosphorene – offering a range of metallic to semiconducting properties in these newly proposed low-energy line defects in phosphorene.

16 citations

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TL;DR: The theoretical results agree with recent scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) experiments and it is proposed that metastable non-hexagonal surface motifs may pave a way to pursue further studies of these interesting complex surface oxidic layers on various metal supports.
Abstract: Growing ultrathin oxide layers on metal surfaces presents a new class of low-dimensional nanomaterials with exceptional chemical and physical properties. These “new oxides” can be used in many niche technologies and applications such as nanoscale electronics and heterogeneous nanocatalysis. In this work, we study the formation of surface oxidic structures and motifs of Cu, supported on the Au(111) substrate, using first-principles density-functional theory calculations in conjunction with an ab initio atomistic thermodynamics model. In particular, we systematically examine and analyze the detailed atomic structure and surface energetics of various oxidic motifs of Cu on Au(111), in particular, p2, p2s, p2(6q6) and the newly suggested metastable p2(6q6) + O3, in comparison to both the binary O/Cu(111) and O/Au(111) systems. Depending on the oxygen atmosphere and the type of surface defects introduced in the oxidic layer, various non-conventional, non-hexagonal surface oxidic motifs of Cu could be obtained. Our theoretical results agree with recent scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) experiments and we propose that metastable non-hexagonal surface motifs may pave a way to pursue further studies of these interesting complex surface oxidic layers on various metal supports.

11 citations

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TL;DR: A strong anisotropic, chirality-dependent mechano-electronic response in the hydrogen-passivated TPNRs upon vortical deformation is found, resulting in a striking difference in the change in the carrier effective mass as a function of torque angle.
Abstract: Many different forms of mechanical and structural deformations have been employed to alter the electronic structure of various modern two-dimensional (2D) nanomaterials. Given the recent interest in the new class of 2D nanomaterials – phosphorene, here we investigate how the rotational strain-dependent electronic properties of low-dimensional phosphorene may be exploited for technological gain. Here, using first-principles density-functional theory, we investigate the mechanical stability of twisted one-dimensional phosphorene nanoribbons (TPNR) by measuring their critical twist angle (θc) and shear modulus as a function of the applied mechanical torque. We find a strong anisotropic, chirality-dependent mechano-electronic response in the hydrogen-passivated TPNRs upon vortical deformation, resulting in a striking difference in the change in the carrier effective mass as a function of torque angle (and thus, the corresponding change in carrier mobility) between the zigzag and armchair directions in these TPNRs. The accompanied tunable band-gap energies for the hydrogen-passivated zigzag TPNRs may then be exploited for various key opto-electronic nanodevices.

10 citations


Cited by
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Journal Article
TL;DR: Electrical writing is combined in solid-state memory with electrical readout and the stored magnetic state is insensitive to and produces no external magnetic field perturbations, which illustrates the unique merits of antiferromagnets for spintronics.
Abstract: Manipulating a stubborn magnet Spintronics is an alternative to conventional electronics, based on using the electron's spin rather than its charge. Spintronic devices, such as magnetic memory, have traditionally used ferromagnetic materials to encode the 1's and 0's of the binary code. A weakness of this approach—that strong magnetic fields can erase the encoded information—could be avoided by using antiferromagnets instead of ferromagnets. But manipulating the magnetic ordering of antiferromagnets is tricky. Now, Wadley et al. have found a way (see the Perspective by Marrows). Running currents along specific directions in the thin films of the antiferromagnetic compound CuMnAs reoriented the magnetic domains in the material. Science, this issue p. 587; see also p. 558 Transport and optical measurements are used to demonstrate the switching of domains in the antiferromagnetic compound CuMnAs. [Also see Perspective by Marrows] Antiferromagnets are hard to control by external magnetic fields because of the alternating directions of magnetic moments on individual atoms and the resulting zero net magnetization. However, relativistic quantum mechanics allows for generating current-induced internal fields whose sign alternates with the periodicity of the antiferromagnetic lattice. Using these fields, which couple strongly to the antiferromagnetic order, we demonstrate room-temperature electrical switching between stable configurations in antiferromagnetic CuMnAs thin-film devices by applied current with magnitudes of order 106 ampere per square centimeter. Electrical writing is combined in our solid-state memory with electrical readout and the stored magnetic state is insensitive to and produces no external magnetic field perturbations, which illustrates the unique merits of antiferromagnets for spintronics.

756 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: The design and fabrication of a three-dimensional in vitro system to model vascular stenosis so that specific cellular interactions and responses to hemodynamic stimuli can be investigated and serve as an in vitro 3D culture system to investigate vascular pathogenesis.
Abstract: Vascular stenosis triggers adaptive cellular responses that induce adverse remodeling, which can progress to partial or complete vessel occlusion. Despite its severity, cellular interactions and biophysical cues that regulate pathological progression are poorly understood. We report the design and fabrication of a three-dimensional in vitro system to model vascular stenosis so that specific cellular interactions and responses to hemodynamic stimuli can be investigated. Tubular cellularized constructs (cytotubes) were produced using a collagen casting system to generate a stenotic arterial model. Fabrication methods were developed to create cytotubes containing co-cultured vascular cells, where cell viability, distribution, morphology, and contraction were examined (Figure). Fibroblasts, bone marrow primary cells, smooth muscle cells (SMCs), and endothelial cells (ECs) remained viable during culture and developed locationand time-dependent morphologies. We found cytotube contraction to depend on cellular composition, where SMC-EC co-cultures adopted intermediate contractile phenotypes between SMCand EC-only cytotubes. Our fabrication approach and resulting artery model can serve as an in vitro 3D culture system to investigate vascular pathogenesis.

570 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used patterned ferromagnetic thin film to demonstrate the profound effect of a substrate on the spin-dependent thermal transport and found that both longitudinal and transverse thermal voltages exhibit asymmetric instead of symmetric spin dependence, due to an out-ofplane temperature gradient imposed by the thermal conduction through the substrate and the mixture of anomalous Nernst effects.
Abstract: Most studies of spin caloritronic effects to date, including spin-Seebeck effect, utilize thin films on substrates. We use patterned ferromagnetic thin film to demonstrate the profound effect of a substrate on the spin-dependent thermal transport. With different sample patterns and on varying the direction of temperature gradient, both longitudinal and transverse thermal voltages exhibit asymmetric instead of symmetric spin dependence. This unexpected behavior is due to an out-of-plane temperature gradient imposed by the thermal conduction through the substrate and the mixture of anomalous Nernst effects. Only with substrate-free samples have we determined the intrinsic spin-dependent thermal transport with characteristics and field sensitivity similar to those of the anisotropic magnetoresistance effect.

164 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: In this paper, a few-layer black phosphorus crystals with thickness down to a few nanometres are used to construct field effect transistors for nanoelectronic devices. But the performance of these materials is limited.
Abstract: Two-dimensional crystals have emerged as a class of materials that may impact future electronic technologies. Experimentally identifying and characterizing new functional two-dimensional materials is challenging, but also potentially rewarding. Here, we fabricate field-effect transistors based on few-layer black phosphorus crystals with thickness down to a few nanometres. Reliable transistor performance is achieved at room temperature in samples thinner than 7.5 nm, with drain current modulation on the order of 10(5) and well-developed current saturation in the I-V characteristics. The charge-carrier mobility is found to be thickness-dependent, with the highest values up to ∼ 1,000 cm(2) V(-1) s(-1) obtained for a thickness of ∼ 10 nm. Our results demonstrate the potential of black phosphorus thin crystals as a new two-dimensional material for applications in nanoelectronic devices.

138 citations