Woun Kang is a professor in Department of Physics/College of Natural Science. He received his Ph.D. from University of Paris XI with the study on organic conductors and joined the Ewha faculty in 1992. Prof. Kang is a low temperature physicist who is also fascinated with material properties. His present research interests are low-dimensional electron systems under extreme environments such as low temperature/high magnetic field/high pressure and quantum limit behavior of low-density metals. He published about 120 research papers in SCI journals and established strong international collaboration with scientists in Japan, France, and U.S.A. He is also a member of the international advisory board of the ISCOM which is a leading international conference on organic superconductors.
Orbit topology analyzed from π phase shift of magnetic quantum oscillations in three-dimensional Dirac semimetalProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 2021, v.118 no.29, e2023027118
Large magnetic anisotropy in canted antiferromagnetic Sr2IrO4 single crystalsPhysical Review B - Condensed Matter and Materials Physics, 2016, v.93 no.9
NMR Evidences of the Coupling between Conduction Electrons and Molecular Degrees of Freedom in the Exotic Member of the Bechgaard Salt (TMTSF)(2)FSO3JOURNAL OF THE PHYSICAL SOCIETY OF JAPAN, 2016, v.85 no.12
Electric field-induced valley degeneracy lifting in uniaxial strained graphene: Evidence from magnetophonon resonancePhysical Review B - Condensed Matter and Materials Physics, 2015, v.91 no.11
Possible quantum Hall effect in a magnetic-field-induced phase transition in the quasi-one-dimensional CDW organic conductor, HMTSF-TCNQPHYSICA B-CONDENSED MATTER, 2015, v.460, 241-244
Upper critical field and superconducting anisotropy of BaFe2-xRuxAs2 (X=0.48 and 0.75) single crystalsProgress in Superconductivity and Cryogenics (PSAC), 2014, v.16 no.4, 31-35