Prof. Byungha ShinKorea
KAIST
Current Position
2025 to presentFellow, The Korean Academy of Science and Technology
2024 to presentDepartment Head, Dept. of MSE, KAIST
2024 to presentVice-President, Materials Research Society of Korea
Academic Experiences
2010 - 2014Research Staff Member at IBM T. J. Watson Research Center
2007 - 2010Post-doc at Stanford Univ
2002 - 2007Ph.D. from Harvard Univ.
Past Professional Experiences
2021 - 2024Director, KAIST Global Leadership Center
2021 - 2023Associate VP of Office of Student Life, KAIST
2018 - 2019Visiting Professor, Columbia University, USA
Honors and Awards
20212021 100 Outstanding Research Achievements by Ministry of Science and ICT, Korean Government
2021Scientist of the Month by Ministry of Science and ICT, Korean Government
2021The 2020 KAISTian of the Year Award
Specialty & Expertise
His current primary research interest is developing novel materials for energy applications with the current emphasis on hybrid perovskite optoelectronic devices (PV, LED, and radiation-detector), chalcogenide thin film solar cells, and photoelectrochemical water splitting and electrochemical nitrogen reduction.
Others

Electronic Trap Detection with Carrier-Resolved Photo-Hall Effect


TBA TBA Functional Composite Materials/TBA

Electronic trap states are a critical yet unavoidable aspect of semiconductor devices, 20 impacting performance of various electronic devices such as transistors, memory devices, solar cells, and LEDs. The density, energy level, and position of these trap states often enable or constrain device functionality, making their measurement crucial in materials science and device fabrication. Most methods for measuring trap states involve fabricating a junction, which can inadvertently introduce or alter traps, highlighting the need for 25 alternative, less-invasive techniques. Here, we present a unique photo-Hall-based method to detect and characterize trap density and energy level while concurrently extracting key carrier properties, including mobility, photocarrier density, recombination lifetime, and diffusion length. This technique relies on analyzing the photo-Hall data in terms of “photo-Hall conductivity” vs. electrical conductivity under varying light intensities and 30 temperatures. We show that the photo-Hall effect, in the presence of traps, follows an astonishingly simple relationship — a hyperbola equation — that reveals detailed insights into charge transport and trap occupation. We have successfully applied this technique to P and N-type silicon as a benchmark and to high-performance halide perovskite photovoltaic films. This technique substantially expands the capability of Hall effect-based 35 measurements by integrating the effects of the four most common excitations in nature —electric field, magnetic field, photon, and phonon in solids — into a single equation and enabling unparalleled extraction of charge carrier and trap properties in semiconductors.​

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