Title | Creativity Born from the Freedom to Explore | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Name | Department of Communications | Registration Date | 2015-09-04 | Hits | 2837 |
att. |
![]() |
||||
Creativity Born from the Freedom to Explore “Fun life with fun physics” is how Heejun Yang approaches his research and it has served him well. He is a scientist at the IBS Center for Integrated Nanostructure Physics and Professor at Sungkyunkwan University where he is a pioneer in the field of two-dimensional materials. His creative thinking style has been influenced by time spent doing research in Korea and France and he now works in a lab made up of a team of multidisciplinary scientists whose diverse backgrounds contribute to their tackling abstract problems. His most recent paper about molybdenum ditelluride (MoTe2) appears in Science in August. Q: What made you curious about molybdenum ditelluride (MoTe2)? Other researchers couldn’t even fabricate it well and you went ahead and developed a new way to make it and then started experimenting with it. A: Two years ago, I was in a meeting with my research center’s director, Young Hee Lee, and he suggested many materials as candidates for our deep research. Q: Why did the team decide to use the flux method to fabricate MoTe2? A: In the Nature Physics article there are several corresponding authors: Director Young Hee Lee, me, and Professor Sung Wng Kim who is one of the material scientists in our department. In a meeting, Sung Wng Kim suggested using the flux method and by adding some extra tellurium we could avoid the deficiency problem. Q: As described in the Science paper, you used lasers to change the state of the MoTe2 from semiconducting 2H to metallic 1T’. How did the team come up with that idea? A: The question we had was ‘How do we convert the 2H to 1T’ on a 2D scale? Also, how can we make local phase transition? We needed to think about things in the nanoscale. We wanted to make local heating, and thought of several options, but using a laser was the most efficient way to locally heat the area. Q: How did you start working in this area of physics? A: I spent 7 years working on my PhD and 2 of those in Paris, France as part of the exchange student system. Paris was really important to me. At Seoul National University (SNU) it was really all about the STM machine and looking at atoms but in Paris it was material study, like MoTe2. Q: Your time in France seems like it had a big impact on you. Do you miss anything from your time there? A: I miss several things. My research attitude and research style may have been influenced by the French way. Like IBS and many other systems they have a unique culture and style. To me, French people seem talkative and they always discuss things. After lunch they have coffee time and discuss science, they take a long dessert time but discuss and initiate good ideas and good projects. I really miss that relaxed atmosphere for science. Q: How did your time interacting with Albert Fert shape your attitude towards doing research? A: One important thing is that I saw how a Nobel Laureate really does his research. Although he was old, about 70 years old when I first met him, he was comfortable discussing math and logic, even with many undergraduate students. I learned that doing science or physics does not only mean using complicated math or logic. This really gave me a sort of confidence about myself and that I can also do good research. Many Korean scientists admire Nobel Laureates but do not ever really have a chance to see how they work. In this sense, I was really lucky. Q: You are in a unique situation in that you get to work in the same research center as your wife and she is the first author of your most recent paper. Do you think that your working together has any added benefits—or any extra difficulties—that other researchers who aren't married do not encounter? A: For me, this is a great thing. I can devote myself to my research and my partner understands. As you can imagine, we sometimes discuss common subjects. Personally, I do not have other things than science for now, so I do not see other difficulties as a couple who are scientists. For family things, we are just like other people and I do not see any big differences. Q: What do you plan to study next? A: I am still young, so I want to extend my research scope so I voluntarily discuss new ideas and outcomes with other scientists. These days I am working in the energy science department in Sungkyunkwan University and alternative energy is always being emphasized in our department. Heejun Yang’s paper Phase patterning for ohmic homojunction contact in MoTe2 appears in the August issue of Science and Bandgap opening in few-layered monoclinic MoTe2 appeared in the May issue of Nature Physics Interviewed by Daniel Kopperud |
Next | |
---|---|
before |