Publications by authors named "Hong Gyu Park"

Tightly bound electron-hole pairs (excitons) hosted in atomically-thin semiconductors have emerged as prospective elements in optoelectronic devices for ultrafast and secured information transfer. The controlled exciton transport in such excitonic devices requires manipulating potential energy gradient of charge-neutral excitons, while electrical gating or nanoscale straining have shown limited efficiency of exciton transport at room temperature. Here, we report strain gradient induced exciton transport in monolayer tungsten diselenide (WSe) across microns at room temperature via steady-state pump-probe measurement.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Novel two-dimensional semiconductor crystals can exhibit diverse physical properties beyond their inherent semiconducting attributes, making their pursuit paramount. Memristive properties, as exemplars of these attributes, are predominantly manifested in wide-bandgap materials. However, simultaneously harnessing semiconductor properties alongside memristive characteristics to produce memtransistors is challenging.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Spin angular momentum (SAM)-encoded single-photon emitters, also known as circularly polarized single photons, are basic building blocks for the advancement of chiral quantum optics and cryptography. Despite substantial efforts such as coupling quantum emitters to grating-like optical metasurfaces and applying intense magnetic fields, it remains challenging to generate circularly polarized single photons from a subwavelength-scale nanostructure in the absence of a magnetic field. Here, we demonstrate single-photon emitters encoded with SAM in a strained WSe monolayer coupled with chiral plasmonic gold nanoparticles.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • A new device architecture called van der Waals Schottky gated metal-semiconductor FETs (vdW-SG MESFETs) uses molybdenum disulfide (MoS) channels with surface-oxidized metal gates to improve performance in field-effect transistors (FETs).
  • These MESFETs operate at low gate voltages under 0.5 volts and demonstrate ideal switching behavior due to the strong coupling at the Schottky junction, achieving minimal energy loss during operation.
  • The study shows that improving the interface between the metal gate and the MoS channel can enhance performance by eliminating unwanted states, leading to a new approach for developing efficient 2D electronic devices.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The study explores a hybrid system using quantum dots and graphene to create synaptic-like behavior, activating excitatory and inhibitory functions with linearly polarized light.
  • Perovskite quantum dots increase photocurrent, while PbS quantum dots decrease it, with a polarizer controlling which device dominates current output based on the light's polarization.
  • Changing the polarization angle allows for fine-tuning of the current weight, enabling processes similar to potentiation (increasing response) and habituation (decreasing response).
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We propose a sol-gel thin film formation process involving nanoimprint lithography. First, indium tin oxide was dissolved in 2-methoxyethanol at a ratio of 5:5 and the mixture were mixed with 10 wt% of a UV-curable. Subsequently, a polydimethylsiloxane sheet prepared by covering a silicon wafer with a polydimethylsiloxane mold was attached to a InSnO thin film to duplicate the nanostructure through UV irradiation exposure.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) are actively studied in various fields of optics and optoelectronics, including nonlinear optics of second-harmonic generation (SHG). By stacking two different TMD materials to form a heterobilyaer, unique optical properties emerge, with stronger SHG at a twist angle of 0° between TMDs and weaker SHG at a twist angle of 60°. In this work, we demonstrate the enhancement of SHG in a heterobilayer consisting of WSeand WSmonolayers stacked at a twist angle of 64.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The lithographically designed potential wells in monolayer WS microcavities are utilized to manipulate nonlinear transition-metal dichalcogenide polaritons and enhance the polariton-reservoir interaction strength.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Electrophysiological recording technologies can provide valuable insights into the functioning of the central and peripheral nervous systems. Surface electrode arrays made of soft materials or implantable multi-electrode arrays with high electrode density have been widely utilized as neural probes. However, neither of these probe types can simultaneously achieve minimal invasiveness and robust neural signal detection.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Nanostructured silicon with an equilibrium shape has exhibited hydrogen evolution reaction activity mainly owing to its high surface area, which is distinct from that of bulk silicon. Such a Wulff shape of silicon favors low-surface-energy planes, resulting in silicon being an anisotropic and predictably faceted solid in which certain planes are favored, but this limits further improvement of the catalytic activity. Here, we introduce nanoporous silicon nanosheets that possess high-surface-energy crystal planes, leading to an unconventional Wulff shape that bolsters the catalytic activity.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Spinal cord neuromodulation can restore partial to complete loss of motor functions associated with neuromotor disease and trauma. Current technologies have made substantial progress but have limitations as dorsal epidural or intraspinal devices that are either remote to ventral motor neurons or subject to surgical intervention in the spinal tissue. Here, we describe a flexible and stretchable spinal stimulator design with nanoscale thickness that can be implanted by minimally invasive injection through a polymeric catheter to target the ventral spinal space of mice.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The development of memory devices with functions that simultaneously process and store data is required for efficient computation. To achieve this, artificial synaptic devices have been proposed because they can construct hybrid networks with biological neurons and perform neuromorphic computation. However, irreversible aging of these electrical devices causes unavoidable performance degradation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Understanding complex neuronal networks requires monitoring long-term neuronal activity in various regions of the brain. Significant progress has been made in multisite implantations of well-designed probes, such as multisite implantation of Si-based and polymer-based probes. However, these multiprobe strategies are limited by the sizes and weights of interfaces to the multiple probes and the inability to track the activity of the same neurons and changes in neuronal activity over longer time periods.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Higher-order optical harmonics entered the realm of nanostructured solids being observed recently in optical gratings and metasurfaces with a subwavelength thickness. Structuring materials at the subwavelength scale allows us toresonantly enhance the efficiency of nonlinear processes and reduce the size of high-harmonic sources. We report the observation of up to a seventh harmonic generated from a single subwavelength resonator made of AlGaAs material.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Heterosynaptic neuromodulation is a key enabler for energy-efficient and high-level biological neural processing. However, such manifold synaptic modulation cannot be emulated using conventional memristors and synaptic transistors. Thus, reported herein is a three-terminal heterosynaptic memtransistor using an intentional-defect-generated molybdenum disulfide channel.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Two-dimensional transition metal dichalcogenides (2D TMDs) have been demonstrated as one of the most outstanding materials not only for fundamental science but also for a wide range of photonic applications. However, an efficient way to control their excitonic properties is still needed for advanced applications with superior device performance. Here, we show that the exciton lifetime of WSe monolayer can be prolonged using metamaterials.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We propose an efficient alignment method for liquid crystals (LCs). A brush-coating method handles film deposition and LC alignment treatment simultaneously herein, meaning a reduction in the conventional alignment layer treatment process steps. A lanthanum yttrium strontium oxide (LaYSrO) film prepared by the sol-gel process was used for the alignment layer.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Electrophysiological recording technologies can provide critical insight into the function of the nervous system and other biological tissues. Standard silicon-based probes have limitations, including single-sided recording sites and intrinsic instabilities due to the probe stiffness. Here, we demonstrate high-performance neural recording using double-sided three-dimensional (3D) electrodes integrated in an ultraflexible bioinspired open mesh structure, allowing electrodes to sample fully the 3D interconnected tissue of the brain.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Multiphoton processes of absorption photoluminescence have enabled a wide range of applications including three-dimensional microfabrication, data storage, and biological imaging. While the applications of two-photon and three-photon absorption and luminescence have matured considerably, higher-order photoluminescence processes remain more challenging to study due to their lower efficiency, particularly in subwavelength systems. Here, we report the observation of from a single subwavelength nanoantenna at room temperature enabled by the Mie resonances.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Recent discoveries of exotic physical phenomena, such as unconventional superconductivity in magic-angle twisted bilayer graphene, dissipationless Dirac fermions in topological insulators, and quantum spin liquids, have triggered tremendous interest in quantum materials. The macroscopic revelation of quantum mechanical effects in quantum materials is associated with strong electron-electron correlations in the lattice, particularly where materials have reduced dimensionality. Owing to the strong correlations and confined geometry, altering atomic spacing and crystal symmetry via strain has emerged as an effective and versatile pathway for perturbing the subtle equilibrium of quantum states.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Quantum confinement in transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDCs) enables the realization of deterministic single-photon emitters. The position and polarization control of single photons have been achieved via local strain engineering using nanostructures. However, most existing TMDC-based emitters are operated by optical pumping, while the emission sites in electrically pumped emitters are uncontrolled.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The research focuses on active dielectric metasurfaces made of split-nanodisk resonators in InGaAsP membranes with quantum wells.
  • These resonators can achieve the optical anapole regime by combining electric dipole and toroidal dipole optical modes for better field localization and resonance.
  • The study shows successful room-temperature lasing from these engineered metasurfaces, revealing low threshold levels and high coherence.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Wavelength-scale lasers provide promising applications through low power consumption requiring for optical cavities with increased quality factors. Cavity radiative losses can be suppressed strongly in the regime of optical bound states in the continuum; however, a finite size of the resonator limits the performance of bound states in the continuum as cavity modes for active nanophotonic devices. Here, we employ the concept of a supercavity mode created by merging symmetry-protected and accidental bound states in the continuum in the momentum space, and realize an efficient laser based on a finite-size cavity with a small footprint.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We studied the nonlinear response of a dimer composed of two identical Mie-resonant dielectric nanoparticles illuminated normally by a circularly polarized light. We developed a general theory describing hybridization of multipolar modes of the coupled nanoparticles and reveal nonvanishing nonlinear circular dichroism (CD) in the second-harmonic generation (SHG) signal enhanced by the multipolar resonances in the dimer, provided its axis is oriented under an angle to the crystalline lattice of the dielectric material. We supported our multipolar hybridization theory by experimental results obtained for the AlGaAs dimers placed on an engineered substrate.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

High quality factor and small mode volume in nanocavities enable the demonstration of efficient nanophotonic devices with low power consumption, strong nonlinearity, and high modulation speed, due to the strong light-matter interaction. In this review, we focus on recent state-of-the-art nanocavities and their applications. We introduce single nanocavities including semiconductor nanowires, plasmonic cavities, and nanostructures based on quasi-bound states in the continuum (quasi-BIC), for laser, photovoltaic, and nonlinear applications.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF