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Young-Joo Lee

Researcher at University of Ulsan

Publications -  268
Citations -  6926

Young-Joo Lee is an academic researcher from University of Ulsan. The author has contributed to research in topics: Hepatocellular carcinoma & Internal medicine. The author has an hindex of 37, co-authored 249 publications receiving 5994 citations. Previous affiliations of Young-Joo Lee include Seoul National University & Samsung.

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Charge-transfer-based gas sensing using atomic-layer MoS2.

TL;DR: A high-performance gas sensor constructed using atomic-layered MoS2 synthesised by chemical vapour deposition (CVD) was developed and the in situ PL characterisation of the changes in the peaks corresponding to charged trions and neutral excitons via gas adsorption processes was used to elucidate the mechanisms of charge transfer between theMoS2 and the gas molecules.
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Chemical Sensing of 2D Graphene/MoS2 Heterostructure device

TL;DR: This novel sensing structure based on a 2D heterostructured device on a flexible substrate promises to provide a simple route to an essential sensing platform for wearable electronics.
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Lessons learned from 1,000 living donor liver transplantations in a single center: how to make living donations safe.

TL;DR: A majority of major living donor complications appear to be avoidable through the strict selection of living donor and graft type, intensive postoperative surveillance, and timely feedback of surgical techniques.
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Graphene-based gas sensor: metal decoration effect and application to a flexible device

TL;DR: In this paper, the role of metal nanoparticles (NPs) on graphene-based devices was investigated in terms of gas-sensing characteristics of NO2 and NH3, and flexible gas sensing was also realized for future applications.
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Efficacy of endoscopic and percutaneous treatments for biliary complications after cadaveric and living donor liver transplantation

TL;DR: Transpapillary endoscopic and percutaneous transhepatic radiologic interventions are both effective therapies for biliary complications associated with liver transplantation and are complementary approaches that help to avoid surgery for these complications.