Jang Ho Chun

Kwangwoon University Korea, South

Professor Jang H. Chun is a Full Professor of Department of Electronic Engineering and a Dean of Graduate School in Kwangwoon University, Seoul, Republic of Korea. He holds a B.E. in Electronics from Kwangwoon University, an M.E. in Electronics from Yonsei University, Seoul, Republic of Korea, and a Ph.D. in Electrophysics from Stevens Institute of Technology, New Jersey, U.S.A. He served as a Visiting Scientist in Princeton University, U.S.A., and University of Tokyo, Japan. Professor Chun’s research focuses on the development of the phase-shift method and correlation constants for determining the electrochemical Frumkin, Langmuir, and Temkin adsorption isotherms and related electrode kinetic and thermodynamic parameters at noble and highly corrosion-resistant metal and alloy/acidic and alkaline solution interfaces. He is a member of The Electrochemical Society, International Association for Hydrogen Energy, and The Korean Electrochemical Society.

Jang Ho Chun

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Latest work with IntechOpen by Jang Ho Chun

The book "Developments in Electrochemistry" contains five feature articles in recent advanced electrochemistry. These selected feature articles emphasize physical phenomena rather than mathematical formalisms of electrochemistry. The topics represented in the book are: The phase-shift method and correlation constants for determining the electrochemical Frumkin, Langmuir, and Temkin adsorption isotherms at interfaces; Quantitative separation of an adsorption effect in the form of defined current probabilistic responses for catalyzed/inhibited electrode processes; A quick, simple, and non-invasive method to evaluate sudomotor dysfunctions; Cyclohexane-based liquid-biphasic systems for organic electrochemistry; Electrochemical transformation of white phosphorus as a way to compounds with phosphorus-hydrogen and phosphorus-carbon bonds. The work represented in this book will be useful, effective, and beneficial to physicists, chemists, surface scientists, material scientists, engineers, and especially electrochemists.

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