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Yong Kyun Kim

Researcher at Hanyang University

Publications -  87
Citations -  482

Yong Kyun Kim is an academic researcher from Hanyang University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Scintillator & Neutron. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 82 publications receiving 375 citations.

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New Effective Organic Scintillators for Fast Neutron and Short-Range Radiation Detection

TL;DR: In this article, the main aspects of the techniques for development new organic scintillators and detectors on their base were reported, and the first samples of a composite scintillation material on the base of stilbene fractions dispersed in silicone glue base with high efficiency of fast neutron detection.
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Development of New Composite Scintillation Materials Based on Organic Crystalline Grains

TL;DR: In this article, the results of investigation of composite scintillators up to 200 mm in diameter based on stilbene or p-terphenyl grains are presented.
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Characteristics of Plastic Scintillators Fabricated by a Polymerization Reaction

TL;DR: In this paper, three plastic scintillators of 4.5 cm diameter and 2.5cm length were fabricated for comparison with commercial plastic SCI using polymerization of the styrene monomer 2,5-diphenyloxazole and 1,4-bis benzene.
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Comparison of New Simple Methods in Fabricating ZnS(Ag) Scintillators for Detecting Alpha Particles

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors developed a new fabrication method which has the advantages of process simplicity and also high efficiency, and the alpha particle response of the detector manufactured by the new spreading method was evaluated at varied thicknesses of ZnS(Ag) and the detection efficiency was better than other methods like liquid brush method with an Am-241 alpha radiation source.
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Plan for nuclear symmetry energy experiments using the LAMPS system at the RIB facility RAON in Korea

TL;DR: The Korea broad acceptance recoil spectrometer and apparatus (KOBRA) and the large-acceptance multipurpose spectrometers (LAMPS) will be ready from the beginning of the accelerator operation, and will be used to perform the nuclear physics experiments as discussed by the authors.