Abstract
Printing technology has been received considerable attentions in history, and these days. These days, printing technology has been developed for smaller, more complicated, and more flexible structures, such as 3D printing, stretchable and/or transparent electronic device, rollable display, and so on. However, to obtain a uniform coating or to control a coating pattern is still far from complete. Hydrodynamic effects are predominant because solid materials should be transferred by liquid. In this seminar, we will talk about how we can achieve a uniform coating result or control a coating pattern when we use soft matters. The examples include coffee-ring-less QD-LED polygonal patterns, liquid metal coating, and drying of some other complex fluids as well. These problems characterize my approach of using optical measurement techniques to explore new questions in multiphase flows and physicochemical hydrodynamics.
About the Speaker
Prof. Hyoungsoo Kim is an associate professor in the Department of Mechanical Engineering at the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST). He received his B.S. (2006) degree from Kumoh National Institute of Technology and M.S. (2008) degree from KAIST. He obtained his PhD degree in Mechanical Engineering from Delft University of Technology (TUDelft) in 2013. He worked with Prof. Howard Stone as a Postdoctoral Researcher and an Associate Research Scientist in the Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering at Princeton University. His research mainly focuses on the development of flow visualization techniques, soft matters, coating and printing technologies, hydrodynamic instabilities, and interfacial flow problems.
Host: Professor Jie Feng