Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Narayan Ch. Das is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Narayan Ch. Das.


Polymer-plastics Technology and Engineering | 2017

Water Uptake Kinetics and Control Release of Agrochemical Fertilizers from Nanoclay Assisted Semi-Interpenetrating Sodium Acrylate Based Hydrogel

Sayan Ganguly; Narayan Ch. Das

ABSTRACT Semi-interpenetrating composite hydrogels composed of poly(acrylic acid-co-sodium acrylate)/polyethylene glycol for the controlled release of fertilizers were synthesized by using nano-phyllosilicate. Hydrogel was characterized by infrared spectral analysis (Fourier transform infrared), X-ray diffraction, and scanning electron microscopy. The cross-link density (ρc), average molecular weight between cross-links (Mc), and the mesh size of the network (ς) were also determined. The degree of neutralization of acrylic acid component has a positive impact in the swelling behavior of hydrogel, which was investigated through its swelling study and pH-oscillatory behavior. The dependency of synthesis parameters, pH and ionic strength on swelling characteristics were investigated. The type of the diffusion phenomena was investigated by calculating various kinetic parameters such as the diffusion coefficient, diffusion rate constant, swelling exponents, etc. The swelling ratio with varying synthetic parameters was recorded to investigate fourth-order factorial model. The model gives the idea of the effect of the independent parameters on the swelling ratio. GRAPHICAL ABSTRACT


Ultrasonics Sonochemistry | 2018

Mechanically robust dual responsive water dispersible-graphene based conductive elastomeric hydrogel for tunable pulsatile drug release

Sayan Ganguly; Debes Ray; Poushali Das; Priti Prasanna Maity; Subhadip Mondal; V. K. Aswal; Santanu Dhara; Narayan Ch. Das

Nanohybrid hydrogels based on pristine graphene with enhanced toughness and dual responsive drug delivery feature is opening a new era for smart materials. Here pristine graphene hydrogels are synthesized by in situ free radical polymerization where graphene platelets are the nanobuiliding blocks to withstand external stress and shows reversible ductility. Such uniqueness is a mere reflection of rubber-like elasticity on the hydrogels. These nanobuilding blocks serve also the extensive physisorption which enhances the physical crosslinking inside the gel matrix. Besides the pH-responsive drug release features, these hydrogels are also implemented as a pulsatile drug delivery device. The electric responsive drug release behaviours are noticed and hypothesized by the formation of conducting network in the polyelectrolytic hydrogel matrix. The hydrogels are also tested as good biocompatibility and feasible cell-attachment during live-dead cell adhesion study. The drug release characteristics can also be tuned by adjusting the conducting filler loading into the gel matrix. As of our knowledge, this type of hydrogels with rubber-like consistency, high mechanical property, tunable and dual responsive drug delivery feature and very good human cell compatible is the first to report.


Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology B-biology | 2018

Waste chimney oil to nanolights: A low cost chemosensor for tracer metal detection in practical field and its polymer composite for multidimensional activity

Poushali Das; Sayan Ganguly; Priti Prasanna Maity; Madhuparna Bose; Subhadip Mondal; Santanu Dhara; Amit Kumar Das; Susanta Banerjee; Narayan Ch. Das

Proper waste disposal from household and restaurants is becoming an important and recurring waste-management concern. Herein, a method of upcycling of waste kitchen chimney oil has been adopted to prepare fluorescent multifunctional carbon quantum dots. These nanodots showed superior biocompatibility, excellent optical properties, water solubility and high yield. Preparation of C-dots from highly abundant carbon source of waste refusals is highly effective in commercial aspect as well as in reducing the immense environmental pollution. The C-dots showed quasi-spherical size obtained from high resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM) having an abundance of 1-4u202fnm in size. The ease of water dispersibility of the nanodots is a mere reflection of their surface polarity which has been supported by Fourier transformed infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). In the field of practical acceptability, the C-dots have been experimented to sense Fe3+ ion in a wide range of concentration (1u202fnM to 600u202fμM) with a detection limit of 0.18u202fnM which can be termed as tracer metal chemosensor. Moreover, the prepared carbon dots were also tested against inter-cellular Fe3+ ion sensing probe. Lastly, we also fabricate the biopolymer‑carbon dots composite for fluorescent marker ink and light emitting polymer film.


Applied Nanoscience | 2018

Mussel inspired green synthesis of silver nanoparticles-decorated halloysite nanotube using dopamine: characterization and evaluation of its catalytic activity

Tushar Kanti Das; Sayan Ganguly; Poushali Bhawal; Sanjay Remanan; Subhadip Mondal; Narayan Ch. Das

AbstractNaturally occurring ceramic tubular clay, Halloysite nanotubes (HNTs), having a significant amount of surface hydroxyls has been coated by self-polymerized dopamine in this work. The polydopamine-coated HNTs acts as a self-reducing agent for Ag+ ion to Ag0 in nanometer abundance. Herein, nano size Ag0 deposited on solid support catalyst has been used to mitigate water pollution within 10xa0min. To establish the versatility of the catalyst, nitroaryl (4-nitrophenol) and synthetic dye (methylene blue) have been chosen as model pollutant. The degradation/reduction of the aforementioned pollutants was confirmed after taking UV–visible spectra of the respective compounds. All the study can make sure that the catalyst is green and the rate constant value for catalytic reduction of 4-nitrophenol and methylene blue was calculated to be 4.45xa0×xa010−3 and 1.13xa0×xa010−3xa0s−1, respectively, which is found to be more efficient in comparison to other nanostructure and commercial Pt/C nanocatalyst (1.00xa0×xa010−3xa0s−1).n


International Journal of Biological Macromolecules | 2018

Design of psyllium-g-poly(acrylic acid-co-sodium acrylate)/cloisite 10A semi-IPN nanocomposite hydrogel and its mechanical, rheological and controlled drug release behaviour

Sayan Ganguly; Subhadip Mondal; Poushali Das; Poushali Bhawal; Priti Prasanna Maity; Sabyasachi Ghosh; Santanu Dhara; Narayan Ch. Das

Soft biomaterials derived from polysaccharides are generally suffers from lack of mechanical robustness and instability. The naturally occurring highly abundance low cost polysaccharide has immense aspect as biomaterial after functionalization which can be designed as stretchable and rubber-like elastic with reversible ductility. A highly swellable, stretchable, low creep, non-cytotoxic nanocomposite hydrogel has been fabricated by simple one-pot Michael type covalent grafting of acrylic acid based copolymer onto psyllium biomacromolecular chian by free radical gelation technique. The fabricated hydrogel was rheologically tested which implies its viscoelastic and thixotropic like features. The porous morphology of the hydrogel was confirmed by scanning electron micrograph. The cryo-transmission electron micrograph shows the random dispersion of the nanoclay (cloisite 10A) tactoids in exfoliated as well intercalated forms. These random distributions of clay nanosheets also enhance the mechanical toughness and reversible ductility of the hydrogels which was also supported by the mechanical and loading-unloading cycle measurement. Nonetheless, the nanocomposite hydrogel was non-cytotoxic against human cell-line (human osteosarcoma) and shows good cell attachment of live cells in a 5-day live-dead assay with almost negligible quantity of cell death. These attributes can promote this material as a soft biomaterial for controlled release device with mechanical robustness and rubber-like elasticity.


Polymer Bulletin | 2018

Selective cross-linking of carboxylated acrylonitrile butadiene rubber and study of their technological compatibility with poly(ethylene-co-methyl acrlylate) by means of mechanical, thermal, and chemical analysis

Poushali Bhawal; Tushar Kanti Das; Sayan Ganguly; Subhadip Mondal; Narayan Ch. Das

Technologically compatible blend becomes an interesting arena of polymer blend industry for their significant properties and fascinating morphologies. This work encompasses the fabrication of technologically compatible blend through melt blending of poly(ethylene-co-methyl acrylate) (EMA) and carboxylated acrylonitrile butadiene rubber (XNBR) in five different ratios to study their compatibility by employing various techniques, like Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), and dynamic mechanical thermal analysis (DMTA). To observe the reinforcing effect of blend specific amount of metal oxide, zinc oxide (ZnO) was incorporated into the system. Curing characterization, FTIR, and morphological analysis confirm that ZnO selectively forms cross-link with XNBR through the coordination complex and does not show any substantial effect on EMA. DMTA reveals high-temperature relaxation of the carboxylic salt of XNBR phase which reinforces the EMA/XNBRZnO-cross-linked blends and also verified by FTIR analysis. Although DSC shows single glass transition temperature (Tg) for all blend systems in between the Tg of pure polymer component, DMTA confirms the presence of two different Tg for plastic and rubber phases with close proximity, specifying technological compatibility in blend compounds. Increasing XNBR improves tensile strength of blends by sacrificing elongation at break. Therefore, our aim is to tune and optimize the blend features by judicial mixing of EMA and XNBR to mitigate the blend failure during service tenure and develop a novel technologically compatible blend.Graphical abstract


Fibers and Polymers | 2018

Carbon Nanostructures Based Mechanically Robust Conducting Cotton Fabric for Improved Electromagnetic Interference Shielding

Sabyasachi Ghosh; Subhadip Mondal; Sayan Ganguly; Sanjay Remanan; Nikhil K. Singha; Narayan Ch. Das

Herein, an intelligent cotton fabric was fabricated using a non-ionic surfactant based macro structured carbonaceous coating through the ‘knife-over-roll’ technique. The developed novel fabric was tested as flexible, mechanically robust with prolonged chemical/moisture resistance. Various characterization techniques were thoroughly used to analyze the fabric. The as-prepared fabric shows an outstanding electromagnetic interference (EMI) shielding efficiency (SE) of about 21.5 dB even at the lowest possible coating thickness (0.20 mm) where the highest EMI SE of 30.8 dB is obtained at only 0.30 mm coating thickness over the X-band frequency range (8.2-12.4 GHz), possibly due to the three-dimensionally interconnected network structure of conducting carbon particles. The micro-computed tomography disclosed the porous architecture and “void-filler” arrangement within the fabrics. For the betterment of serviceability and practicability of the coated fabric, the water tolerance and contact angle studies were conducted. The relatively high contact angle than pure cotton fabric, and excellent water resistance after coating ensure improved endurance for external or industrial uses. Therefore, this proof-of-construct manifests commercialization of the developed fabric for multipurpose applications in a facile, less-hazardous and economical way.


Polymer-plastics Technology and Engineering | 2018

Preparation and Properties of Halloysite Nanotubes/Poly(ethylene methyl acrylate)-Based Nanocomposites by Variation of Mixing Methods

Sayan Ganguly; Poushali Bhawal; Anirvan Choudhury; Subhadip Mondal; Poushali Das; Narayan Ch. Das

ABSTRACT Halloysite nanotube-based inorganic–organic polymer nanocomposite has been developed with improved mechanical strength in one direction by solution mixing followed by melt mixing. Melt mixing, solution mixing, and melt-cum-solution mixing were performed to optimize the mechanical strength of the nanocomposites. The field emission scanning electron microscopic images and small-angle X-ray scattering spectrum can support the unidirectional array of halloysite nanotubes in the matrix. The tensile properties revealed that solution–melt mixing is the most desired way to develop clay-based nanocomposites. Thermal characterizations implied that thermal stability was improved after nanoclay incorporation. Dynamic mechanical analysis showed the flow properties and the “Payne effect” of the nanocomposites. GRAPHICAL ABSTRACT


Materials Science and Engineering: C | 2018

Polysaccharide and poly(methacrylic acid) based biodegradable elastomeric biocompatible semi-IPN hydrogel for controlled drug delivery

Sayan Ganguly; Priti Prasanna Maity; Subhadip Mondal; Poushali Das; Poushali Bhawal; Santanu Dhara; Narayan Ch. Das

Nanoparticles embedded semi-interpenetrating (semi-IPNs) polymeric hydrogels with enhanced mechanical toughness and biocompatibility could have splendid biomedical acceptance. Here we propose poly(methacrylic acid) grafted polysaccharide based semi-IPNs filled with nanoclay via in situ Michael type reaction associated with covalent crosslinking with N,N-methylenebisacrylamide (MBA). The effect of nanoclay in the semi-IPN hydrogel has been investigated which showed significant improvement of mechanical robustness. Meanwhile, the hydrogels showed reversible ductility up to 70% in response to cyclic loading-unloading cycle which is an obvious phenomenon of rubber-like elasticity. The synthesized semi-IPN hydrogel show biodegradability and non-cytotoxic nature against human cells. The live-dead assay showed that the prepared hydrogel is a viable platform for cell growth without causing severe cell death. The in vitro drug release study in psychological pH (pHu202f=u202f7.4) reveals that the controlled drug release phenomena can be tuned by simulating the environment pH. Such features in a single hydrogel assembly can propose this as high performance; biodegradable and non-cytotoxic 3D scaffold based promising biomaterial for tissue engineering.


Luminescence | 2018

Dual doped biocompatible multicolor luminescent carbon dots for bio labeling, UV-active marker and fluorescent polymer composite

Poushali Das; Sayan Ganguly; Subhadip Mondal; Uttam Kumar Ghorai; Priti Prasanna Maity; Sumita Choudhary; Subhashis Gangopadhyay; Santanu Dhara; Susanta Banerjee; Narayan Ch. Das

We report on metal-non-metal doped carbon dots with very high photoluminescent properties in solution. Magnesium doping to tamarind extract associated with nitrogen-doping is for the first time reported here which also produce very high quantum yield. Our aim is to develop such dual doped carbon dots which can also serve living cell imaging with easy permeation towards cells and show non-cytotoxic attributes. More importantly, the chemical signatures of the carbon dots unveiled in this work can support their easy solubilization into water; even in sub-ambient temperature. The cytotoxicity assay proves the almost negligible cytotoxic effect against human cell lines. Moreover, the use of carbon dots in UV-active marker and polymer composites are also performed which gave clear distinguishable features of fluorescent nanoparticles. Hitherto, the carbon dots can be commercially prepared without adopting any rigorous methods and also can be used as non-photo-bleachable biomarkers of living cells.

Collaboration


Dive into the Narayan Ch. Das's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Sayan Ganguly

Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Subhadip Mondal

Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Poushali Das

Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Poushali Bhawal

Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Tushar Kanti Das

Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Priti Prasanna Maity

Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Sabyasachi Ghosh

Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Sanjay Remanan

Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Santanu Dhara

Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Amit Kumar Das

Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge