Central Salt and Marine Chemicals Research Institute
Central Salt and Marine Chemicals Research Institute (formerly Central Salt Research Institute) is a constituent laboratory of the Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), India.[1] The Institute was inaugurated by Jawahar Lal Nehru on 10 April 1954 at Bhavnagar, in Gujarat.[2]
Technology developed
- Preparations of nutrient-rich salt of plant origins
- Electrodialysis domestic desalination system
- Preparation of novel iodizing agent
- "CleanWrite" writing chalk
- Preparation of low sodium salt of botanic origin
- Plastic Chip Electrodes [3, 4].
Research activity
- Molecular sensors for selective recognition of cations/anions
- Recognition of analytes and neutral molecules in physiological condition
- Supramolecular metal complexes to study photo-induced energy/electron transfer processes
- Nanocrystalline dye-sensitized solar cells (DSSC)
- Smart Materials
- Tailored and modified electrodes.
- Green Chemistry
- Polymer Chemistry and development of novel drug delivery system
- Pharmaceutical Biotechnology and Natural products
- Recovery of precious metal ions from natural sources
- Crystal engineering
- Computational Study
- Electrochemical/chemical value addition processes
- Development of polyethylene based inter polymer membranes and design of electrodialysis units
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gollark: That sounds like a giant projectoid.
gollark: I have a screensaver like that and it is perfect and without flaw.
gollark: > I would just dump the program's data structures directly into a framebuffer.I was saying that THIS was very readable, because it is.
gollark: It's very readable.
References
- "List of CSIR laboratories and their important research programmes" (PDF). csirhrdg.nic.i. Archived from the original (PDF) on 10 April 2009. Retrieved 18 October 2014.
- "Genesis of CSMCRI". csmcri.org. Retrieved 18 October 2014.
3. Polymer–graphite composite: a versatile use and throw plastic chip electrode; Mosarrat Perween, Dilip B. Parmar, Gopala Ram Bhadu, Divesh N. Srivastava; Analyst, 139 (2014) 5919-5926.
4. An improved next generation off-laboratory polymer chip electrode USA [US20170082576; A1]
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