Publications by authors named "Kang Sik Nam"

Article Synopsis
  • Reliable and sensitive virus detection is crucial to prevent airborne transmission, with PCR being a primary diagnostic method, but it is often slow due to traditional thermocycling processes.
  • Plasmonic PCR offers a faster alternative by using light-driven heating with gold nanorods, allowing for quicker detection of the air-sampled influenza virus H1N1.
  • This new methodology achieved virus detection in just 12 minutes, demonstrating a sensitivity level similar to commercial PCR devices, making it effective for rapid on-site pathogen identification.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS-CoV-2) outbreak triggered global concern and emphasized the importance of virus monitoring. During a seasonal influenza A outbreak, relatively low concentrations of 10-10 viral genome copies are available per 1 m of air, which makes detection and monitoring very challenging because the limit of detection of most polymerase chain reaction (PCR) devices is approximately 10 viral genome copies/mL. In response to the urgent need for the rapid detection of airborne coronaviruses and influenza viruses, an electrostatic aerosol-to-hydrosol (ATH) sampler was combined with a concanavalin A (ConA)-coated high-throughput microfluidic chip.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The interest in removing contagious viruses from indoor air using ventilation and filtration systems is increasing rapidly because people spend most of the day indoors. The development of an effective platform to regenerate the antiviral function of air filters during use and safe abrogation of used filters containing infectious viruses is a challenging task, because an on-demand safe-by-design manufacture system is essential for in-place antiviral coatings, but it has been rarely investigated. With these considerations, an electrically operable dispenser was prepared for decorating continuous ultrafine Fe-Zn, Fe-Ag, or Fe-Cu particles (<5 nm) onto SiO nanobeads (ca.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The assemblies of anisotropic nanomaterials have attracted considerable interest in advanced tumor therapeutics because of the extended surfaces for loading of active molecules and the extraordinary responses to external stimuli for combinatorial therapies. These nanomaterials were usually constructed through templated or seed-mediated hydrothermal reactions, but the lack of uniformity in size and morphology, as well as the process complexities from multiple separation and purification steps, impede their practical use in cancer nanotherapy. Gas-phase epitaxy, also called aerotaxy (AT), has been introduced as an innovative method for the continuous assembly of anisotropic nanomaterials with a uniform distribution.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Cancer immunotherapies are being researched for their ability to enhance treatment effectiveness and reduce side effects compared to traditional cancer therapies.
  • This study introduces a new method using air-liquid two-phase electrospray to create biomimetic nanosystems made with clinically relevant compounds for better delivery of cancer drugs.
  • The developed nanosystems, specifically paclitaxel-loaded, show improved efficacy due to their unique shape, which enhances their transport and interaction with cells, outperforming similar-sized spherical particles with or without immunotherapy agents.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Due to antimicrobial resistance and the adverse health effects that follow broad and inappropriate use of antibacterial agents, new classes of antibacterials with broad and strong bactericidal activity and safety for human use are urgently required globally, increasingly so with the onset of climate change. However, R&D in this field is known to be rarely profitable, unless a cost-effective, flexible, and convenient platform that ensures the production of workable candidate antibacterials can be developed. To address this issue, inorganic nanomaterials have been considered for their bactericidal activities, yet further investigations of composition crystalline modifications and/or surface biomaterial coatings are still required to provide effective and safe antibacterial nanoparticles.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF