MicroSensors and MicroActuators

Georgia Tech MEMS group

 

 

Home     People     Research     News     Publications     Facilities     Courses     Links     Contact us     Members

 

Seung-Joon Paik (Postdoctoral Associate)

 

Biographical Sketch

Seung-Joon Paik received the B.S. degree at the School of Electrical Engineering and the M.S. and Ph.D. degrees at the Electrical Engineering and Computer Science of Seoul National University, Seoul, Korea, in 1999, 2001, and 2005, respectively. His doctoral dissertation concerned the design, fabrication, and testing of silicon microneedles for neurophysiologic applications. He was with Automation and Systems Research Institute in Seoul National University, as a postdoctoral associate from 2005 to 2007, where he developed sensors for robotic applications including accelerometers and gyroscopes. He was also with SML Electronics, Inc., Seoul, from 2007 to 2008, where he developed mass-manufacturing process of silicon accelerometers in collaboration with major foundry companies in Korea. He is currently a postdoctoral associate with the School of Electrical and Computer Engineering of the Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, Georgia.

His current research interests are in the field of micromachining of polymer materials and in biomedical applications of micromachined devices. Other research interests are in inertial sensors, in 3-D multi-chip packaging of MEMS devices, and in microfluidics.

Office: 404-894-8807

Home:

Fax: 404-894-5028

spaik8@mail.gatech.edu

Project:

     Self-Administered Microneedle Patches

Develop a microneedle array that is capable of self-administration of vaccines in a minimally invasive way and that is fabricated by using polymer-based micromachining processes

 Publications:

  1. P.-C. Wang, B. A. Wester, S. Rajaraman, S.-J. Paik, S.-H. Kim, M. G. Allen, “Hollow Polymer Microneedle Array Fabricated by Photolithography Process Combined with Micromolding Technique,” IEEE EMBC conference, Minneapolis, MN, Sept. 2-6, 2009.

 

Last modified on November 16, 2009

All information in these pages is copyrighted. Copyright ©1998-2009 by
the School of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology.
All rights reserved.  Disclaimer.