Kim Kimoon

Kim Kimoon
Born 1954 (age 6364)
Seoul, South Korea
Residence Pohang, South Korea
Nationality South Korean
Alma mater Seoul National University (B.S., 1976)
Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (M.S., 1978)
Stanford University (Ph.D., 1986)
Known for Supramolecular chemistry, self-assembly, cucurbituril, metal-organic framework
Awards Ho-Am Prize (2006)
Best Scientist and Engineer Award (2008)
Izatt-Christensen Award (2012)
Scientific career
Fields Chemistry
Institutions Pohang University of Science and Technology, Institute for Basic Science
Doctoral advisors James P. Collman, Mu Shik Jon
Korean name
Hangul
Revised Romanization Gim Gi-mun
McCune–Reischauer Kim Kimun

Kim Kimoon is a South Korean materials chemist and professor in the Division of Advanced Materials Science at Pohang University of Science and Technology. He is the first and current director of the Center for Self-assembly and Complexity at the Institute for Basic Science.

Education

Kim received his B.S. degree from Seoul National University in 1976, M.S. degree from Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology from KAIST in 1978 under advisor Mu Shik Jon, and Ph.D. degree from Stanford University in 1986 under advisor James P. Collman. After graduating, he did two years of postdoctoral work at Northwestern University under James A. Ibers.

Career

Kim started his academic career at the Department of Chemistry, Pohang University of Science and Technology (POSTECH) in 1988, where he later became a Distinguished University Professor (POSTECH Fellow).

His research focuses on developing novel functional materials and devices based on supramolecular chemistry. In particular, his group has been working on a wide variety of functional materials based on cucurbiturils,[1][2][3][4][5] a family of pumpkin-shaped macrocyclic molecules, and metal-organic porous materials useful for catalysis, separation and gas storage.[6][7][8][9][10][11]

Kim has authored and coauthored 240 papers which have been cited more than 14,300 times with an h-index of 63. Most of his work has been published in the high impact journals such as Nature, Nature Chemistry, Angewandte Chemie, and the JACS.

In particular, the paper published in Nature in 2000,[12] which reported the synthesis of homochiral nanoporous crystalline materials using self-assembly and an application for a chiral catalyst, was selected as one of the 35 most notable papers among chemical related papers published in Nature from 1950 to 2000 including Watson and Crick’s DNA structure, Kroto and Smalley’s discovery of the fullerene, and Nicolaou’s Taxol total synthesis.[13]

Since 1997, Kim has been the director of the Center for Smart Supramolecules supported by Creative Research Initiatives and later by Acceleration Research program sponsored by the Korean Ministry of Education, Science and Technology (MEST). Until recently, he has also been in charge of the Division of Advanced Materials Science (AMS), launched in 2008 with a support from the World Class University (WCU) project of the MEST, as project leader. He has played a key role in establishing research and education programs of AMS. He was named the director of the Center for Self-assembly and Complexity (CSC), Institute for Basic Science (IBS) on August 1, 2012 by the Korean government.

Awards

See also

References

  1. J.-S. Seo; D. Whang; H. Lee; S. I. Jun; J. Oh; Y. J. Jeon; K. Kim (2000). "A homochiral metal-organic porous material for enantioselective separation and catalysis". Nature. 404: 982–986. doi:10.1038/35010088. PMID 10801124.
  2. J. Kim; I.-S. Jung; S.-Y. Kim; E. Lee; J.-K. Kang; S. Sakamoto; K. Yamaguchi; K. Kim (2000). "New Cucurbituril Homologues: Syntheses, Isolation, Characterization, and X-ray Crystal Structures of Cucurbit[n]uril(n=5, 7, and 8)". J. Am. Chem. Soc. 122: 540–541. doi:10.1021/ja993376p.
  3. J. W. Lee; S. Samal; N. Selvapalam; H.-J. Kim; K. Kim (2003). "Cucurbituril Homologues and Derivatives: New Opportunities in Supramolecular Chemistry". Acc. Chem. Res. 36: 621–630. doi:10.1021/ar020254k.
  4. D. N. Dybtsev; H. Chun; S. H. Yoon; D. Kim; K. Kim (2004). "Microporous Manganese Formate: A Simple Metal-Organic Porous Material with High Framework Stability and Highly Selective Gas Sorption Properties". J. Am. Chem. Soc. 126: 32–33. doi:10.1021/ja038678c. PMID 14709045.
  5. D. N. Dybtsev; H. Chun; K. Kim (2004). "Rigid and Flexible: A Highly Porous Metal-Organic Framework with Unusual Guest-Dependent Dynamic Behavior". Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 43: 5033–5036. doi:10.1002/anie.200460712.
  6. D. N. Dybtsev; A. L. Nuzhdin; H. Chun; K. P. Bryliakov; E. P. Talsi; V. P. Fedin; K. Kim (2006). "A Homochiral Metal-Organic Material with Permanent Porosity, Enantioselective Sorption Properties, and Catalytic Activity". Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 45: 916–920. doi:10.1002/anie.200503023.
  7. K. Kim; N. Selvapalam; Y. H. Ko; K. M. Park; D. Kim; J. Kim (2007). "Functionalized cucurbiturils and their applications". Chem. Soc. Rev. 36: 267–279. doi:10.1039/b603088m.
  8. D. Kim; E. Kim; J. Kim; K. M. Park; K. Baek; M. Jung; Y. H. Ko; W. Sung; H. S. Kim; J. H. Suh; C. G. Park; O. S. Na; D.-k. Lee; K. E. Lee; S. S. Han; K. Kim (2007). "Direct Synthesis of Polymer Nanocapsules with a Noncovalently Tailorable Surface". Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 46: 3471–3474. doi:10.1002/anie.200604526.
  9. M. Banerjee; S. Das; M. Yoon; H. J. Choi; M. H. Hyun; S. M. Park; G. Seo; K. Kim (2009). "Postsynthetic Modification Switches an Achiral Framework to Catalytically Active Homochiral Metal-Organic Porous Materials". J. Am. Chem. Soc. 131: 7524–7525. doi:10.1021/ja901440g. PMID 19438178.
  10. S. Das; H. Kim; K. Kim (2009). "Metathesis in Single Crystal: Complete and Reversible Exchange of Metal Ions Constituting the Frameworks of Metal-Organic Frameworks". J. Am. Chem. Soc. 131 (11): 3814–3815. doi:10.1021/ja808995d. PMID 19256486.
  11. D.-W. Lee; K. M. Park; M. Banerjee; S. H. Ha; T. Lee; K. Suh; S. Paul; H. Jung; J. Kim; N. Selvapalam; S. H. Ryu; K. Kim (2011). "Supramolecular fishing for plasma membrane proteins using an ultrastable synthetic host–guest binding pair". Nature Chemistry. 3: 154–159. doi:10.1038/nchem.928.
  12. Seo, Jung Soo; Whang, Dongmok; Lee, Hyoyoung; Jun, Sung Im; Oh, Jinho; Jeon, Young Jin; Kim, Kimoon (27 April 2000). "A homochiral metal-organic porous material for enantioselective separation and catalysis" (PDF). Nature. 404: 982–986. doi:10.1038/35010088. Retrieved 10 October 2018.
  13. "Looking Back". Nature. Retrieved 10 October 2018.
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