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Woong Hee Lee, 51Santa Barbara, CA

Woong Lee Phones & Addresses

Santa Barbara, CA   

Ann Arbor, MI   

Mentions for Woong Hee Lee

Career records & work history

Lawyers & Attorneys

Woong Lee Photo 1

Woong Lee - Lawyer

ISLN:
923710604
Admitted:
2011

Woong Lee resumes & CV records

Resumes

Woong Lee Photo 35

Senior Process Development Engineer

Location:
5439 Tree Farm Ln, Santa Barbara, CA
Industry:
Glass, Ceramics, & Concrete
Work:
Corning Incorporated
Senior Process Development Engineer
Invenios Nov 2015 - Feb 2017
Process and Product Development Engineer
University of Michigan Nov 2014 - Oct 2015
Research Fellow
Nanoselect Nov 2014 - Aug 2015
Mems Process Engineer
Universtiy of Michigan Jan 2010 - Sep 2010
Research Associate
University of Michigan Sep 2002 - Dec 2009
Research Assistant
Biodigit Laboratory Corporation Mar 2001 - May 2002
Research Scientist
Korea University Mar 1999 - Feb 2001
Research Assistant
Education:
University of Michigan 2009
University of Michigan 2002 - 2009
Doctorates, Doctor of Philosophy, Biomedical Engineering
Korea University 2001
Master of Science, Masters
Korea University 1999 - 2001
Masters, Biotechnology
Inha University 1999
Bachelors, Bachelor of Science
Skills:
Biomedical Engineering, Nanotechnology, Microfluidics, Pcr, Chemistry, Elisa, Mems, Protein Chemistry, Microfabrication, Dna, R&D, Research, Biosensors, Biotechnology, Microscopy, Immunoassays, Biochemistry, Mass Spectrometry, Molecular Biology, Analytical Chemistry, Science, Research and Development, Laser Ablation, Photomask Design, Drie Etching, Grinding and Polishing, Lab on A Chip, Dna Sequencing, Cell Culture, Purification, Zygo Profiler, Gene Assembly, Biosensor, In Vivo Microdialysis, Dna Purification, Gene Cloning, Ledit, Neuroscience, Biomems, Enepig, Laser Scanning Confocal Microscopy
Languages:
Korean
English
Woong Lee Photo 36

Woong B Lee

Woong Lee Photo 37

Woong Lee - Ann Arbor, MI

Work:
UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN 2010 to 2000
Research Fellow
University of Michigan - Ann Arbor, MI 2002 to 2009
Researcher
BIODIGIT CORPORATION - Seoul, KR 2001 to 2002
Research Scientist
KOREA UNIVERSITY - Seoul, KR 1999 to 2001
Research Assistant
Education:
UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN - Ann Arbor, MI 2009
Doctor of Philosophy in Biomedical Engineering
INHA UNIVERSITY 1999
Bachelor of Science in Biotechnology
KOREA UNIVERSITY - Seoul, KR
Doctoral
Skills:
Bio-MEMS, Microfluidic, Biosensor ELISA, bioassay, and diagnostic system development Anodic aluminum oxide (AAO) nanopore membrane development Neurotransmitter measurement by silicon probe Segmented flow analysis Lithography Plasma etching Chemical vapor deposition LC-MS Laser induced fluorescence (LIF) detector Scanning electron microscope (SEM) Protein purification and conjugation DNA purification and analysis on a chip with hybridization Gene assembly on a chip In vivo rat surgery Low pressure Chemical vapor deposition (LPCVD)
Woong Lee Photo 38

Woong Lee - Ann Arbor, MI

Work:
University of Michigan Nov 2014 to 2000
Research Fellow
Nanoselect Nov 2014 to 2000
MEMS process engineer
UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN - Ann Arbor, MI 2010 to Oct 2014
Research Fellow
University of Michigan - Ann Arbor, MI 2002 to 2009
Research Assistant
BIODIGIT CORPORATION - Seoul, KR 2001 to 2002
Research Scientist
KOREA UNIVERSITY - Seoul, KR 1999 to 2001
Research Assistant
Education:
UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN - Ann Arbor, MI 2009
Doctor of Philosophy in Biomedical Engineering
INHA UNIVERSITY 1999
Bachelor of Science in Biotechnology
KOREA UNIVERSITY - Seoul, KR
Doctoral
Woong Lee Photo 39

Woong Lee - Ann Arbor, MI

Work:
University of Michigan Oct 2010 to 2000
Research Fellow, Chemistry
University of Michigan - Ann Arbor, MI Sep 2010 to Sep 2010
Research Associate II, Chemistry
Chemical Engineering, University of Michigan, Ann Ar- bor, Michigan, USA 2010 to Jan 2010
Research Associate
Chemical Engineering, University of Michigan, Ann Ar- bor, Michigan, USA 2002 to 2009
Research Assistant
Biodigit Laboratory Corporation - Seoul, KR 2001 to 2002
Research Scientist
Department of Biotechnology, Korea University - Seoul, KR 1999 to 2001
Research Assistant
Military Police, Division 1993 to 1995
Corporal
Education:
University of Michigan Ann Arbor - Ann Arbor, MI 2002 to 2009
Ph.D. in Biomedical Engineering
Skills:
Lab Equipment DRIE anisotropic etcher, MA/BA6 Mask Aligner, Maskmaker, LAM9400, Physical vapor deposition (PVD), Nanospec, Dektek6, XeF2 isotropic etcher, L-EDIT photomask designer, Oxidation furnace, photoresist sputter, Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) machine, gel electrophoresis system, SDS- PAGE, high speed centrifuge, dialysis, GenePix4000B, nanodrop, and basic biological ex-perimental equipments, LC-MS Lab Technique - Microchip fabrication - In vivo rat surgery - Photomask design - DRIE anisotropic etching - XeF2 isotropic etching - Photolithography on silicon chip - Mouse/rat surgery - Neurotransmitter measurement by silicon probe - DNA sequence analysis and synthesis - Gene cloning on a chip (transformation, miniprep, ligation, maxiprep, restriction enzyme treatment, and relative experiments) - ELISA, bioassay, and diagnostic system development - Protein expression and large culture - Protein purification and conjugation - DNA purification on a chip with hybridization - Ligation chain reaction on a chip - Solid phase PCR on a chip - Gene assembly on a chip - Oligonucleotide design for gene assembly with Gene2Oligo - Immobilizing DNA probes and products on microplate - Hybridizing and detecting DNA products on microplate by PCR-ELISA - Bacteria culture (Salmonella, E.coli) Computer software - L-EDIT - Microsoft Office tools

Publications & IP owners

Us Patents

Microfabrication Of A Microdialysis Probe With Nanoporous Membrane

US Patent:
2018027, Sep 27, 2018
Filed:
Nov 29, 2016
Appl. No.:
15/764124
Inventors:
- Ann Arbor MI, US
Hyeun Joong YOON - Brookings SD, US
Woong Hee LEE - Goleta CA, US
International Classification:
B01D 67/00
B01D 61/24
B01D 71/02
G01N 33/487
G01N 1/10
Abstract:
Microdialysis sampling is an essential tool for in vivo neuro-chemical monitoring. Conventional dialysis probes are over 220 μm in diameter and have limited flexibility in design because they are made by assembly using preformed membranes. The probe size constrains spatial resolution and governs the amount of tissue damaged caused by probe insertion. To overcome these limitations, we have developed a method to microfabricate probes in Si that are 45 μm thick 180 μm wide. The probes contain a buried, U-shaped channel that is 30 μm deep 60 μm wide and terminates in ports for external connection. A 4 mm length of the probe is covered with a 5 μm thick nanoporous membrane. The membrane was microfabricated by deep reactive ion etching through a porous aluminum oxide layer. The microfabricated probe has cross-sectional area that is 79% less than that of the smallest conventional microdialysis probes. The probes yield 2-7% relative recovery at 100 nL/min perfusion rate for a variety of small molecules. The probe was successfully tested in vivo by sampling from the striatum of live rats. Fractions were collected at 20 min intervals (2 μL) before and after an injection of 5 mg/kg, i.p amphetamine. Analysis of fractions by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry revealed reliable detection of 13 neurochemicals, including dopamine and acetylcholine, at basal conditions. Amphetamine evoked a 43-fold rise in dopamine, a result nearly identical to a conventional dialysis probe in the same animal. The microfabricated probes have potential for sampling with higher spatial resolution and less tissue disruption than conventional probes. It may also be possible to add functionality to the probes by integrating other components, such as electrodes, optics, and additional channels.

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