scispace - formally typeset
S

Sang Seok Lee

Researcher at KAIST

Publications -  21
Citations -  607

Sang Seok Lee is an academic researcher from KAIST. The author has contributed to research in topics: Liquid crystal & Photonic crystal. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 19 publications receiving 409 citations. Previous affiliations of Sang Seok Lee include Kigali Institute of Science and Technology & Korea Institute of Science and Technology.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Robust Microfluidic Encapsulation of Cholesteric Liquid Crystals Toward Photonic Ink Capsules

TL;DR: The photonic ink capsules, which have a precisely controlled bandgap position and size, provide new opportunities in colorimetric micro-thermometers and optoelectric applications.
Journal ArticleDOI

Structural Color Palettes of Core-Shell Photonic Ink Capsules Containing Cholesteric Liquid Crystals.

TL;DR: Photonic microcapsules with onion-like topology are microfluidically designed to have cholesteric liquid crystals with opposite handedness in their core and shell, resulting in a rich variety of color on the optical palette.
Journal ArticleDOI

Wavelength-tunable and shape-reconfigurable photonic capsule resonators containing cholesteric liquid crystals

TL;DR: This work encapsulate CLCs with double shells to design a capsule-type laser resonator that enables the fine-tuning of lasing wavelength with temperature and the capsules retain their double-shell structure during the dynamic deformation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reconfigurable Photonic Capsules Containing Cholesteric Liquid Crystals with Planar Alignment

TL;DR: A microfluidics approach was employed to integrate an ultrathin alignment layer into microcapsules to separate the CLC core and the elastomeric solid membrane using triple-emulsion drops as the templates, preserving the layer integrity during elastic deformation of the membrane.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nonspherical double emulsions with multiple distinct cores enveloped by ultrathin shells.

TL;DR: A new design of capillary microfluidic devices is reported that create nonspherical double-emulsion drops with multiple distinct cores covered by ultrathin middle layer, potentially useful for nanoliter-scale reactions and encapsulations of the reaction products.