01
BioMEMS Sensing Platforms
Designing flexible microsystems and MEMS-based sensor architectures for biological signal acquisition in soft tissue environments.
PhD Student
Department of Mechanical Engineering, Chonnam National University
Gwangju, South Korea
I develop MEMS-enabled and bioelectronic sensing platforms for engineered cardiac tissues, with an emphasis on multimodal electromechanical recording and drug cardiotoxicity evaluation.
Research Interests
My research addresses the need for synchronized and quantitative monitoring of engineered cardiac tissues, particularly the integration of mechanical contraction, electrical activity, and drug response analysis in three-dimensional in vitro models. By combining MEMS strain sensors, microelectrode arrays, and multimodal signal processing, my work aims to develop scalable platforms for disease modeling and drug cardiotoxicity evaluation.
01
Designing flexible microsystems and MEMS-based sensor architectures for biological signal acquisition in soft tissue environments.
02
Building integrated platforms to evaluate contraction, maturation, and tissue-level coupling in engineered cardiac constructs.
03
Combining strain, electrical, and structural readouts to observe dynamic heart-tissue behavior in real time.
04
Translating cardiac microsystems into quantitative screening tools for safety assessment, long-term monitoring, and disease-model studies.
Selected projects that represent my recent academic and engineering trajectory.
Building a biomimetic hypoxic cardiac model with integrated sensing workflows for electromechanical analysis under disease-relevant conditions.
Developing a 3D cardiac tissue platform for parallelized pharmacological testing with integrated electromechanical readouts.
Investigating how graphene-based conductive microenvironments modulate cardiomyocyte communication, maturation, and functional electrophysiology.
Representative papers highlighting my recent work in bioelectronic sensing, cardiac tissue platforms, and translational biomaterials.
A quick view of the full academic record documented across the dedicated archive pages.
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