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Minghui Hong

Researcher at National University of Singapore

Publications -  520
Citations -  23158

Minghui Hong is an academic researcher from National University of Singapore. The author has contributed to research in topics: Laser & Laser ablation. The author has an hindex of 68, co-authored 502 publications receiving 19083 citations. Previous affiliations of Minghui Hong include University of Konstanz & Nanyang Technological University.

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Drive-Current Enhancement in Ge n-Channel MOSFET Using Laser Annealing for Source/Drain Activation

TL;DR: In this paper, a gate-first self-aligned Ge nMOSFET with a metal gate and CVD HfO 2 has been successfully fabricated using KrF laser annealing (LA) as dopant-activation annesaling.
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Plasmon-Induced Optical Anisotropy in Hybrid Graphene–Metal Nanoparticle Systems

TL;DR: It is shown that plasmon-induced hot carrier generation in the graphene is dominated by direct photoexcitation with minimal contribution from charge transfer from the gold, and the strong near-field interaction manifests as an unexpected and long-lived extrinsic optical anisotropy.
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Nanostructures fabricated on metal surfaces assisted by laser with optical near-field effects

TL;DR: In this paper, spherical silica particles (500-1000 nm in diameter) were placed on metal films and after laser illumination with a single laser shot, nanoholes were obtained at the original position of the particles.
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Laser Hybrid Micro/nano-structuring of Si Surfaces in Air and its Applications for SERS Detection

TL;DR: A rapid two-step approach to fabricate SERS substrates with high controllability in ambient air is developed, which provides a high-speed and low-cost method to produce Sers substrates over a large area.
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Biomimetic Three-Dimensional Anisotropic Geometries by Uniaxial Stretch of Poly(ɛ-Caprolactone) Films for Mesenchymal Stem Cell Proliferation, Alignment, and Myogenic Differentiation

TL;DR: It is concluded that uniaxial stretching has potential in patterning film topography with anisotropic structures and could be used as "basic units" to create tissue constructs with microscale control of cellular alignment and elongation for tissue engineering applications.