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Research Areas
School of Basic Sciences
Thrust Areas in Biophysical Chemistry, Biochemistry and Microbiology (i) Protein Chemistry & Spectroscopy, Structure-Function Elucidation of Various mycobacterial and mammalian Small Heat Shock Proteins, virulence and pathogenesis of Mycobacterium Tuberculosis, exploration of therapeutic potential of peptides, Investigation of Amyloid Fibrillation and their significance in preventing different amyloid diseases
Thrust Areas in Cancer Biology (i) Role of AAA+ ATPases in cancer (ii) Cancer drug discovery (iii) Gastrointestinal (gastic/stomach, pancreatic and colorectal) cancers and gut microbiota (iv) Role of probiotics as biotherapeutics for colorectal cancer prevention
Thrust Areas in Chemical and Molecular Biology (i) Structure function studies on peptide or protein binding G-protein Coupled Receptors, Molecular and Cellular Biology (ii) Rational Design of Peptide / Protein as Therapeutics (Antimicrobial / Antiviral / Anti-inflammatory) (iii) Computational Biology and Bioinformatics
Thrust Areas in Biochemistry and Biophysical Chemistry (i) Protein Chemistry & Spectroscopy, Structure-Function Elucidation of Various Small Heat Shock Proteins Related to Different Diseases (Cataract, Leprosy and Tuberculosis). (ii) AAA+ATPase, Screening and validation of Antibacterial and Anticancer drugs
Thrust Areas in Inorganic Chemistry(i) Synthesis and Coordination Aspects of Homo and Heterometallic Complexes; Metal Based Anticancer/Imaging Agents; Functional Materials and Luminescent Materials; Nanoparticle Based Sensors. (ii) Coordination Chemistry with an application of magnetic materials, Supramolecular assembly, MRI contrast agents, Fluorescent Chemosensors for biological molecules, ions, hazardous chemicals and explosives.
Ionic liquids as electrolytes for Lithium Ion Batteries
Thrust Areas in Organic Chemistry (i) Heterocyclic Chemistry, Asymmetric synthesis using chiral pool approach; Enantioselective catalysis and new reaction methods; New molecular entities with biological properties; Dipolar Cycloadditions; C-H functionalization, Pericyclic reactions, Metathesis, Umpolung chemistry, Radical chemistry, traditional & newer functional group transformations for application in marine alkaloids synthesis, terpenoids and polyketide based natural products, Anticancer and Antimicrobial activities of plant-derived natural products. (ii) Carbohydrate Chemistry, novel synthetic methods development, Bioactive Natural and Unnatural Products synthesis (iii) Supramolecular Chemistry, Molecular Recognition through Solid State; Metal- Organic and Covalent Open Frame (MOF and COF) Compounds. (iv) Polymer chemistry: Synthesis of Chiral Polymers and their applications in chiral induction; Synthesis of Achiral and Chiral Resins and their applications in synthesis; PIL stabilized metal nanoparticles and their applications; Polyelectrolyte-DNA interaction studies; PILs for gas separation membranes; Synthesis of MIPs and resins for nuclear waste treatment; Synthesis of (RAFT derived) ionic, pH, temperature and solvent responsive homo- and block copolymers towards their self-assembling for drug delivery. (v) Design, Synthesis and Characterization of Peptides using CD, Fluorescence, ITC and NMR. Redesigning known drugs for other Therapeutic applications. (vi) Enabling technologies for organic synthesis: Photocatalysis, Synthetic organic electrochemistry, Photoelectrochemistry, Transition metal catalysis, flow chemistry. (vii) Hydrogels, nanocatalysts and electrodes for water splitting and other electrochemical reactions, responsive polymer networks, self healing and shape memory polymers, development of solid electrolytes and flexible electronics devices, batteries and actuators
Thrust Areas in Physical, Theoretical and Computational Chemistry (i) Time-resolved spectroscopy on molecules and materials: Developing spectroscopic tools and photomaterials; Harvesting triplets from Singlet fission; Photophysics of thermally activated delayed fluorescence; Long- range charge separation in emerging photomaterials. (ii) Molecular modelling; Molecular Dynamics (MD) simulations. (iii) Development and application of multi-configurational Quantum Mechanical Methods to study energetics and dynamics of bound and transient states; Investigation of photochemical reactions in the non-adiabatic (“beyond-Born- Oppenheimer”) realm; Computational modelling of chemical reactions using quantum mechanical (QM) and mixed quantum mechanical – molecular mechanical (QM/MM) methods; Investigation of bacterial resistance toward beta-lactam based antibiotic drugs using QM/MM methods.
Complex Analysis, Complex Dynamics and Fractals, Functional Analysis, Virational inequalities, Complementarity problems, Algebra, Combinatorial Matrix Theory, Spectral Graph Theory, Data mining, and Portfolio Analysis, Soft Computing, Optimization Theory, Numerical Analysis, Fluid Dynamics, Bio-fluid dynamics, Computational Fluid dynamics, Numerical Methods for PDEs, Probability Theory and Random Matrix Theory, Queueing Theory, Stochastic Models, Applied Probability, Control of Queues. Number Theory, Stochastic Partial Differential Equations.
Stochastic Control Problems, Numerical Solutions to PDEs, Applied Nonlinear Analysis, Several Complex Variables, Valuation Theory, Algebraic Geometry, Commutative Algebra, Combinatorial Commutative Algebra, Number Theory, Control Theory, Linear Algebra, Stochastic Differential Equations (Theory and Numerical), Random Matrix Theory, Operator Theory.
Thrust Areas:
(i) Accelerator based atomic, molecular and surface physics: Experimental Atomic-Molecular-Surface Physics, Molecular Electronics, Scanning Tunnelling Microscopy, nanomaterial, Biomolecules, Ion beam engineered quantum materials for energy and sensing applications, Design and fabrication of Accelerator based systems, Applications of energetic ion beam in atomic, molecular and surface phenomena, Synchrotron radiation based research, High energy charged particles use and associated instrumentation developments, Structural application, modification of materials and health/medical applications.
(ii) Atomistic Modeling and Molecular Simulations: Large Scale Quantum Simulations of Nanostructures, Quantum Transport in Graphene and 2- Dimensional layered Structures, Quantum Mechanics and Molecular Mechanics, Modeling of Biological Systems, Biophysics, Energy Materials, Magnetic Materials, Materials Modeling using Machine Learning.
(iii) Experimental Condensed Matter Physics: (a) Surface and Interface Physics: Growth, modification, novel applications, and related fundamental and applied physics aspects leading to Quantum devices and technology. This includes microscopy methods (use and development of novel methods), such as SEM, TEM, AFM, STM, Small angle X-Ray, XRD, Raman, UV- Vis,), Synchrotron Radiation Research, Ion beam applications (b) Strongly Correlated Electron Systems: High-temperature Superconductor, Multiferroics, and magnetoelectrics, topological phases of matter; Magnetism at the nanoscale, Anomalous Hall Effect in quantum materials, Bio Magnetism, 2D dilute magnetic semiconductors (c) Materials growth related to Energy, Quantum technology, and Strategic areas. (d) Device Physics: Fabrication, testing, and prototyping of low- dimensional, nanostructural, and quantum phenomena-based devices, Semiconductor Quantum Qubits and associated electronics, the mechanical design of novel devices, Energy storage materials and devices, Flexible and Stretchable Devices, Biosensors, Neuromorphic devices and networks, photovoltaic and solar cell device, Light Emitting Devices (e) Energy storage materials and devices, Flexible and Stretchable Devices, Biosensors, Neuromorphic devices and networks, 2D materials, TMDs, and heterostructures. (f) Soft condensed Matter, 2D dilute magnetic semiconductor, photovoltaic and solar cell device, Light Emitting Devices, Bio Magnetism. (g) Semiconductor Fabrication: Wide band gap semiconductors (like SiC), growth and characterization of Epilayers on SiC (and other WBG), Sensors and Detectors for harsh environments (h) Instrumentation: Devices/Sensors/Detectors fabrication, testing and packaging (i) Experimental High Energy Physics: Rare B and charm decays (j) Nanophotonics and Plasmonics: Coupling Photonic nanostructures to Nano waveguides and resonators; Semi-Classical and Quantum Interferometers; Structured Light; Flexible and Wearable Photonics; Instrumentation for Industrial Applications; Agriphotonics; Optical Devices; Biosensing
(iv) Theoretical Condensed Matter Physics/Statistical Mechanics: Quantum Dissipation & Decoherence, Open quantum system, Quantum Transport, Non-equilibrium Phenomena like the study of first passage properties (Classical & Quantum ), persistence and related topics, Topological Order, Integrable systems
(v) Theoretical High Energy Physics: Classical and Quantum Gravity, Mathematical Physics, String Theory, Black Hole Thermodynamics and Phase transitions, AdS/CFT Correspondence, Quantum Field Theory, gauge theory, Mathematical aspect of QCD
(vi) Computational soft matter and biophysics: Phase transitions and critical phenomena, Domain coarsening in passive and active matter systems; Aging dynamics in out-of-equilibrium systems; Transport of intelligent active matter through complex geometries; Cellular uptake of hard and deformable nanoparticles; Interaction and self-assembly of nanoparticles at bio-membranes, Phase behavior and wetting phenomena of flexible and semiflexible polymers; Structural, mechanical, and transport properties of nano-composite (polymer-grafted nanoparticle) systems; Evaporation induced self-assembly.
School of Earth, Ocean and Climate Sciences
Air Quality; Atmospheric Aerosols and Climate; Atmosphere and Ocean Modeling; Aerosols and Monsoon; Extreme Weather Events; Energy and Climate; Monsoon; Machine learning applications in Climate Sciences; Ocean Biogeochemistry; Ocean Dynamics; Remote Sensing Applications in Climate Sciences; Satellite and Physical Oceanography; Urban Weather and Climate.
Structural geology and crustal deformation; Hydrogeochemistry; Geothermics; Chemical Oceanography, Environmental Geochemistry; Rock Mechanics; Unconventional energy; Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology; Depositional processes and environment; Micropaleontology; Crust-mantle interaction in rift- ridge area; Petrogenesis of Large Igneous Provinces (LIPs); Evolution of sub-continental lithospheric mantle (SCLM); Remote Sensing Application in Glaciology; Near Surface Geophysics; Mineral exploration using geophysical techniques; Induce seismicity and Hazard analysis; Hydro-Geophysics
School of Electrical and Computer Sciences
Glimpses of IIT Bhubaneswar CSE Research Activities
Computer Science and Engineering (CSE) group at School of Electrical Sciences of IIT Bhubaneswar is a vibrant mix of multi-disciplinary research areas within CSE domain. The group has mix of people from both industrial and academic background. The following are the glimpses of research activities by CSE group at IIT Bhubaneswar. See our research poster!
1. Advanced Network and Security (Contact: Dr. Padmalochan Bera)
Last one decade and so, the rapid emerging service requirements and deployment demands have driven the evolution of networking in many directions. The main objective of the any networking platform is to provide on demand service provisioning to the users, customers and service providers along with achieving better performance and data security. However, the inherent characteristics of the networks (architecture and resource constraints), varying requirements (time, zone, role), deployment demands (application context), ubiquitous computing platform, and emerging security threats, insecure communication channel; intelligent adversaries in and out of the scene; and loopholes (bugs) in software development impose complexity and significant challenges to this problem. In this direction, the major research activities of the Advanced Network and Security group of IIT Bhubaneswar are as follows: (i) Context-aware adaptive routing protocol for improving performance and security in Mobile Ad hoc Network, (ii) Advanced cryptographic protocols for secure communication and data access in Cloud, (iii) Design of software controlled network architecture and platform, distributed controller and energy aware control algorithms for Software Defined Network, and (iv) End-to-end security solution for secure communication in Software Defined Network. (v) Formal Compliance Checking of Network and System configurations with Security policies and requirements. (vi) Advanced Malware Detection using reinforcement learning. (vii) Trusted Computing and communication environment for MANET using open flow network platforms.
2. CPU-GPU Computing (Contact: Dr. Manoranjan Satpathy)
It is common these days to have multi-core CPUs and GPUs alongside in the modern day processor architectures. As regards to GPUs, there are many research issues like (a) efficient transfer of data from CPU to GPU, (b) lowering of the GPU memory latency, (c) management of stall time of GPU cores and (d) power consumption. Techniques like timely prefetching, victim caching, and accurate prediction of data use by the wraps can address these problems. Research works along these lines are ongoing at IIT Bhubaneswar. In addition, the design space needs to be explored to find the best-fit to address the above problems. Testing and verification of these designs, is an important activity which is also in the focus of this research group.
3. HCI and Computer Vision Research (Contact: Dr. Debi Prosad Dogra)
The research group is focusing on developing smart biometric systems, AR systems for learning, sensor guided physical rehabilitation, crowd flow analysis, visual surveillance and intelligent traffic analysis systems. Computer vision is primarily being used to solve some interesting problems on the above domains. Detection of anomaly in crowd movement, road traffic violation detection, monitoring elderly and disabled persons are some of the applications being targeted. Research collaborations with KIST South Korea and IKST Bangalore are presently going on in ITS and visual surveillance. Research fund in the order of 7.0 million INR has already been received by the group from various agencies.
4. Design and implementation of a large-scale testbed for research on Internet-of-Things (Contact: Dr. Sudipta Saha)
Research on emerging and highly demanding areas of decentralized systems such as Internet-of-Things(IoT), Wireless Sensor Networks (WSN) is best aided by an appropriate testbed. Although there are several similar testbeds available all-over the globe, e.g., WiseBed, Twist, Kansei, Indriya etc., each has its own deficiency. Most of these testbeds do not provide several vital facilities required for research on IoT. Also, it is a fact that in India no institute has yet made any such testbed publicly available. Consequently, our researchers always need to depend on the availability of time slots in testbeds hosted by the foreign countries. Highly restricted time slots as well as even uncertainty of their availability due to huge number competing users over the globe make such testbeds practically unusable for real development purpose. To accelerate research in these highly demanding areas in our county, we take an endeavour to build a campus-wide setup to support conducting experiments with a huge decentralized system composed of thousands of real devices. Some of the key factors that are taken as of primary importance in the development of the testbed are as follows – scalability, device architecture heterogeneity, communication heterogeneity, support for variety of experimental environments, mobility, scope for federation, enough facility for repeatability and concurrency, efficient support for concurrent users etc. This work track has been successfully initiated through development of a tiny part of the testbed inside the Wireless Sensor Network lab in the School of Electrical Sciences (SES) of the Institute by the support of Institute seed grant under Dr Sudipta Saha (faculty, SES). The subsequent step will be to go for a building wide setup and next a campus wide testbed which is the final target.
5. Robust Online Machine Learning Algorithms with Game Theory (Contact: Dr. Shweta Jain)
In many practical examples like sponsored search auctions, crowdsourcing, smart grids, recommender systems on social networks etc., the data comes through the strategic agents. These strategic agents can manipulate the data in order to maximize their own utilities which can lead to low accuracy of the learning algorithms. Thus, there is a great need to design the robust machine learning algorithms which cannot be manipulated by the strategic agents. Dealing with the strategic agents warrants the use of game theory principles in conjunction with the online learning algorithms and leads to non-trivial issues. Some of the applications and research directions in this area include: 1) Crowdsourcing: Can we incentivize the anonymous crowd-workers to perform the tasks with their maximum efficiency? 2) Social Networks: Can we improve the quality of the posts posted on the online networking sites by providing the proper incentives to the participants? 3) Demand Response on Smart Grids: Can we incentivize the consumers on the smart grids to reduce their electricity consumption by designing the proper payment schemes so as to reduce the peak load while learning the demand profiles of the consumers? 4) Blockchain: Is it possible to design automated smart-contracts by learning the preferences of the interacting parties over a period of time?
6. Software Engineering using Formal Methods (Contact: Dr. Srinivas Pinisetty)
Using formal methods and model driven development approaches for designing and developing systems is a major area of research. Formal specification languages have a precise syntax and semantics, and every statement in the language have a unique meaning mathematically. Expressing requirements using a formal specification will make requirements clearer and remove ambiguities and inconsistencies. Formal languages are more easily amenable to automatic processing, by means of tools. Various formal verification techniques such as model checking involves the formal modeling of computing systems and verification of properties on the models, including safety and timing properties. These model-based techniques are well suited for verifying complex safety-critical systems. The primary focus of research work in this area at IIT Bhubaneswar is to develop formal methods and tools which support the modeling, automated analysis, and synthesis of complex computational systems. Some of the ongoing works in this area are specifically relate to developing formally based runtime verification and enforcement mechanisms, and their application in domains such as cyber-physical systems and security. Runtime verification is a formal verification technique that allow to check whether a run of a system under scrutiny satisfies (or violates) a given correctness property. A verification monitor does not influence the system execution. Runtime enforcement extends runtime verification and refers to the theories, techniques, and tools aiming at ensuring the conformance of the executions of systems under scrutiny with respect to some desired property. Using an enforcement monitor, an (untrustworthy) input execution (in the form of a sequence of events) is modified into an output sequence that complies with a property (e.g., formalizing a safety requirement).
7. Modeling of Spatio-temporal Processes (Contact: Dr. Adway Mitra)
We come across spatio-temporal data in many different domains – both physical and virtual. In physical domain, readings from sensors deployed over a large area at regular intervals of time is a rich source of spatio-temporal data, while in the virtual domain we have videos – sequence of frames indexed by time, where each frame is a collection of spatially arranged pixels. Spatio-temporal data has certain peculiar properties such as spatial and temporal coherence, and this property can be utilized to solve various problems related to mining patterns and extracting information from this type of data. So far I have explored videos and climatic processes in the virtual and physical domains respectively, for tasks as diverse as content-based video summarization and scene segmentation, and identification of anomalies in temperature and rainfall that may lead to heat waves and droughts. I am looking forward to solving new problems in these areas, and also study new forms of spatio-temporal data primarily in the physical domain.
8. Scheduling Algorithms for Mobile Systems (Contact: Dr. Joy Chandra Mukherjee)
Our research primarily focused on designing scheduling algorithms for efficient resource allocation for some problems in different types of large scale mobile systems, vehicular ad hoc networks (VANET), and electric vehicles in smart grids.
1) In vehicular environments, information dissemination to moving vehicles is a challenging problem. The service provider (SP) schedules the dissemination of events within some given deadlines through RSUs to a set of vehicles that subscribe to them. The problem of event notification to moving vehicles from RSUs can be formulated under different constraints where a central SP has complete control of the RSUs, and execute scheduling algorithms for low cost event dissemination. The problem of event notification from RSUs with finite capacity under different constraints can be studied where there are multiple SPs in a city, each controlling a set of RSUs with limited information about other SPs, and designed distributed scheduling algorithms that SPs will run to collaborate among themselves for low cost event dissemination.
GLIMPSES OF IIT BHUBANESWAR ECE RESEARCH ACTIVITIES
The Electronics and Communication Engineering (ECE) Group at IIT Bhubaneswar perfectly blends various oriented focus areas including analog & digital communications, signal, speech & image processing, RF & microwave, microelectronics and integrated circuits & VLSI systems. The ECE faculty are comprised of those with strong academic as well as industrial experience. Some glimpses of ECE R&D activities at IIT Bhubaneswar, across disciplines, are as follows.
Communications and Signal Processing
Since the advent of wireless and mobile technology, the communications sector has witnessed an indomitable growth in its journey to bridge the distances across the world. The demand for better connectivity, high bandwidth and data speeds for wireless internet, techniques to convert real world signals into digital form for processing and transmission, and most importantly, achieving all of this without sacrificing power, has demanded considerable research focus.
The ECE group at IIT Bhubaneswar is committed to make the technology more directed for practical applications. The R&D focus has been on applications such as speech-based access of agricultural commodity prices, and weather information in the local Odia language, which involves automatic speech recognition, and responses through pre-recorded and dynamically generated dialects. The biggest highlight of this system is that it needs no internet connection.
The major thrust areas of the group are: communication and modulation technologies including MIMO-based transceiver designs
1. space shift keying (SSK) systems using antenna arrays
2. energy harvesting communications for simultaneous transmission of information and power over the same channel
3. technology in healthcare, including design of wearable wireless healthcare monitoring systems
4. Internet of things (IoT)-based health monitoring
5. Bio Signal Processing
6. Computer Vision
7. Machine Learning & Deep Learning
8. Coding techniques, Algebraic Error Correcting Codes; Index Coding; Network Coding; Coded caching; Coded Distributed Computing
RF and Microwave Engineering
If there has been a boom in the wireless communications industry over the last four decades, it has been due to the strides made in radio frequency (RF) and microwave technology, which essentially forms the back-end of modern day wireless communication systems which offer high range, throughput, low power consumption, and high data rates.
At ECE, significant focus is placed to direct microwave technology for not just communications, but also for several other applications in their own domain.
The major thrust areas of the group are:
1. the design of RADAR systems to detect human vital signs for search and rescue operations
2. bone health detection and classification using microwaves
3. metamaterial absorbers and reflectors; modelling and design of high Q/high SRF planar RF inductors
4. coupling and hybrid structures for RF measurement applications
5. tunable and reconfigurable RF subsystems for broadband performance with spurious rejections
6. Remote sensing: Microwave and Optical Sensors for Healthcare, Optical sensor Structural Health Monitoring
7. Antenna and Antenna Arrays, Microwave Absorvers and Polarisers, Computational Methods and Radio frequency identification (RFID) system
8. Communication Systems: Wireless Communication (Front-end Design, MIMO Systems, THz Communications) Green Communication (Cognitive Communication, Energy Harvesting)
9. Computational Techniques (Traditional and Evolutionary Nature-Inspired Methods)
10. Radar Systems: Vehicular MM-wave Radar, Ground Penetrating Radar, Through-wall Imaging Radar
Optical Networks and Engineering
If there has been a boom in the wireless communications industry over the last three decades, it has been due to the strides made in radio frequency (RF) and microwave technology, which essentially forms the back-end of modern day wireless communication systems which offer high range, low power, and high data rates.
Looking at the ever-increasing demands for high bandwidth, optical networks are a gateway to the future of communication systems. At ECE, significant focus is placed to direct microwaves and optical technology for not just communications, but also for other applications such as design of distributed fiber optical sensor systems for structural health monitoring of oil and gas pipelines, which offers ranges up to tens of kilometers using a single fiber cable.
The next generation wireless networks require fronthauls/backhauls that can provide immense data rate support while being inexpensive. Shared optical networks like passive optical network (PON) is a primary candidate for future fronthauls. However, the original medium access control (MAC) protocols designed for PONs are not suitable for the purpose. Hence, carefully designed MAC protocols are the need of the hour.
Another candidate for fronthauls is free space optics (FSO) owing to its data carrying potential and cost effectiveness. Data transmission using the FSO network comes with its own set of challenges like atmospheric turbulence, scintillation, absorption, scattering, etc. All these impairments affect network reliability. Hence, building an FSO network also requires carefully designed algorithms, which is also being researched upon.
The major thrust areas of the group are:
1. Optical Communication
2. Optical Sensor
3. Photonic-electronic signal processing
4. Fiber Sensor-based Structural Health Monitoring System Design
5. Architecture and MAC protocol design for wireless-optical integrated networks, optical access networks, wireless access networks, edge computing, and free space optical networks
Micro and Nanoelectronic Devices
Consumer electronics demand use of ultra-small, scalable and easily modifiable engineering entities which should act as the ‘heart’ of any electronic system. In the world of technology boom where every electronic product is ‘machine learned’ and ‘smart’, pushing Moore’s Law to its limits is obvious.
With the advent of nanotechnology, quantum technology and alternate-to-silicon materials, electronic device research is much more than just laboratory findings which is even more backed by the recent Government of India missions. To address these national and global requirements, the Semiconductor Devices group at IIT Bhubaneswar is readily playing their roles.
Blended by a combination of electronic materials, silicon and wide bandgap semiconductors and state-of-the-art simulation, modeling and fabrication process lines, the group forms an efficient combination in performing translational research in a plethora of applications covering various sectors.
The major thrust areas of the group are:
1. Sensors and spectroscopy
2. Wide bandgap semiconductors and power devices,
3. Emerging nanoelectronic devices, electronic materials
4. 3D NAND memory, energy generation and storage devices
5. Reliability analysis of semiconductor devices,
6. Machine learning augmented with TCAD analysis of semiconductors
7. Semiconductor device modelling
8. Cryogenic-CMOS for analog front end circuitry
9. Device circuit co-design
The group runs the Microfabrication and Characterization Lab that houses state-of-the-art device fabrication and characterization equipments and TCAD tools for quality research and beyond lab prototype development.
Integrated Circuits and VLSI Systems
Efforts are on to push the boundaries to achieve large scale integration of circuits with high speed, and low power. Much of the R&D efforts are directed to design of heterogeneous multi-core systems with emphasis on resource-aware programming paradigms. This is backed up with design of tightly coupled processor arrays and accelerators, with emphasis on synthesizable logic structures, with the aim of integrating them into bus-based architecture systems. These systems are shown to be useful to run intensive, nested-loop programs.
Performance enhancement with respect to speed and area requires knowledge of the architecture supported by the target prototyping platform, such as a Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA). The exercise involves identification of the subset of Boolean logic functions which amicably maps to FPGA slice primitives through proper configuration using fast hardwired routing fabric and use lower amount of programmable routing resources.
FPGAs support only a handful logic cell configurations, for which not many high speed implementation variants exist for a particular design. The research group at ECE addresses the involved design challenges of speed-area efficient implementations and inclusion of VLSI testability, fault detection, fault localization and fault tolerance with minimal overhead.
Faculty members also work in the area of Analog, RF, and Mixed-Signal VLSI Integrated Circuits and Systems.
There is also ongoing interdisciplinary research combining VLSI and microwave, which involves design of single-chip network analyzer testsets for 5G field testing and measurement applications, which offer broad bandwidth and high dynamic range.
The major thrust areas of the group are:
Programmable Hardware Accelerators and Coarse-Grained Reconfigurable Architectures
System-on-Chip Design
Low power VLSI ASIC Design
High Level Synthesis and CAD for VLSI
Digital VLSI Architectural Design of ICs and FPGA Architectures
VLSI architectures for digital signal processing
VLSI architectures for computer arithmetic
VLSI architectures for fault tolerant & fault testable hardware design
Circuit design for high speed serial link (full-duplex, 4-PAM signaling, CTLE and DFE design, Equalizer adaptation)
Signaling across Silicon interposer and MCM
On-Chip DC-DC converters
Phase-Locked Loop; ADC Design for high speed serial Links; CMOS circuit design for Silicon Photonics.
IC Design for Neuromorphic Intelligence and Wireless Communications
New Radio System Architectures for Next-Generation Wireless Standards and RF/Wireless System-on-Chip (SoC) Design
Glimpses of IIT Bhubaneswar EE Research Activities
Electrical Engineering (EE) group at School of Electrical Sciences of IIT Bhubaneswar is a vibrant mix of multi-disciplinary research areas within electrical power domain. The group has mix of people from both industrial and academic background.
Following are the glimpses of research activities by EE group at IIT Bhubaneswar. See our research poster!
1. SMART GRID TECHNOLOGY AND POWER SYSTEMS
The Smart Grid will allow utilities to move electricity around the system as efficiently and economically as possible. Smart Grid builds on many of the technologies already used by electric utilities but adds communication and control capabilities that will optimize the operation of the entire electrical grid. Smart Grid is also positioned to take advantage of new technologies, such as plug-in hybrid electric vehicles, various forms of distributed generation, solar energy, smart metering, lighting management systems, distribution automation, and many more. Smart grid group at IIT Bhubaneswar designed labs consisting of renewable sources like photovoltaic, fuel cell, battery and flywheel storage system. All these renewable sources are integrated to the grid. An optimum energy management algorithm is developed for maximum utilization of the renewable sources. In a smart grid system, demand side management is an integral part for cost and energy optimization. In this lab, a prototype for demand side management based on GSM communication module is developed. In an another experimental setup, power consumption of different AC and DC loads with solar system are studied. From this study, it is concluded that the efficiency of DC loads is more as compared to the AC loads.
2. POWER ELECTRONICS AND POWER QUALITY
As the trend towards electrification and renewable energies increases, enabling technologies such as power electronics are becoming ever more important. Power electronics is an umbrella term that encompasses the systems and products involved in converting and controlling the flow of electrical energy. Power electronics lab group at IIT Bhubaneswar has been actively working on high step-up dc-dc converters, low cost and high efficient multilevel inverter, Power electronics for renewable energy sources, energy storage and power quality, Switched Mode Power Converters and Design of Integrated Magnetics, Application of Power Electronics in Power Systems and Grid Interactive Converters and Wide-band gap semiconductor based high frequency power conversion. Some of the highlights include design of switched-capacitor (SC) based bidirectional dc-dc converter topology for multiple voltage gain and multilevel inverter topology has been developed which requires less number of power semiconductor devices hence more economic while in order to achieve higher efficiency different optimization based switching techniques
3. MICRO-GRIDS AND RENEWABLE SYSTEMS
Micro grids are localized grids that can disconnect from the traditional grid to operate autonomously. Because they are able to operate while the main grid is down, micro grids can strengthen grid resilience and help mitigate grid disturbances as well as function as a grid resource for faster system response and recovery. Micro grids support a flexible and efficient electric grid by enabling the integration of growing deployments of distributed energy resources such as renewables like solar. In addition, the use of local sources of energy to serve local loads helps reduce energy losses in transmission and distribution, further increasing efficiency of the electric delivery system. Micro grid group at IIT Bhubaneswar actively works on protection, control topologies, islanding detection, managing renewable energy sources, power electronic inverters etc. One of the highlight of this group is the development of faster islanding detection mechanism with more accuracy.
4. POWER SYSTEM PROTECTION AND ANALYSIS
The proliferation of distributed energy resources is setting the stage for modern distribution systems to operate as micro grids. Distribution protective devices cannot reliably protect micro grids due to the variable and often limited short-circuit capacities of micro grids. Moreover, the research on micro grid protection has not led to a commercially available micro grid relay to date and has little prospect of reaching that level in the near future. As a result, the existing options for reliable micro grid protection remain effectively the sub transmission and transmission system protective devices. Hence power system group at IIT Bhubaneswar actively works on developing innovative protection algorithms for micro-grid protection. To simulate the fault scenarios in real world power system, a hardware-in-loop setup is created using Real Time Digital Simulator (RTDS) and external Phasor Measurement Unit (PMU). The relaying algorithm is developed in DSP processor and the tripping decision is given to RTDS which can be viewed in the RSCAD runtime menu.
5. HIGH VOLTAGE APPLICATIONS
HV group at IIT Bhubaneswar actively works on diesel engine exhaust treatment using dielectric barrier discharge technique. Here, high voltage needs to be applied for Non-thermal plasma processing. Setup is made to take the exhaust from any of the two stationary diesel engines present in the lab. There are cylinders with gases such as N2, O2, CO2, CO and NO also present in the lab to simulate required gas mixtures for experimenting. High voltage test sets, AC, DC and pulse of the range 0-30 kV would be used to supply required high voltage to the plasma reactor. Experiments are also being carried out to generate high voltage from the battery using power electronic components. A 2000:1 voltage divider and oscilloscope would be used to measure and analyze the applied voltage. Gas analyzer would be used to measure the concentrations of various pollutants present in the exhaust. This lab also consists of equipment such as hot air oven, heated hose, air compressor, fridge dryer, hydraulic pellet maker etc.
School of Humanities, Social Sciences and Management
Open macroeconomics and Natural Resource Economics. Environmental Economics, Natural Resource Management and Rural Development, Climate Change, Mining Economics, Financial Management, Health Economics, Transportation Economics, Financial Economics, Behavioural Economics, Energy Economics & Health Economics, Finance, Political Economics, Public Economics, Development Economics, Labour Economics, Law and Economics, Dynamic Macroeconomic Modeling, Empirical Financial Analytics, Time-Frequency Financial Analysis, Empirical Industrial Organisation.
Indian Diaspora Literature, Travel Writings/Autobiographies/Memoirs, Film and Media Studies, Gender Studies and Science Fiction, Indian Writing in English. Postcolonial World Literature, Native North American Literature, Indigenous Literature Written in English, Indian Writing in English, ELT, Cross-cultural Communication, Business Communication, Eco Lit, Memory Studies, Gender and Sexuality Studies, Nationalist Thought, Comparative Mythology and Culture Studies, Applied Linguistics, American Literature
Cognitive Science, Cognitive Science and Memory, Psychology of Cognition and Emotion, Cognitive Psychology, Cognitive Neuroscience, Psycholinguistics, Neurolinguistics, Social Cognition and Social Psychology, Positive Psychology, Forensic and Criminal Psychology, Cross Cultural Psychology, Cyber Psychology, Clinical Psychology, Mental Health of Marginalized Populations, Health Psychology, Cultural Psychology, Qualitative Research in Social Science, Community Psychology, Psychosocial Understanding of Tribal Societies in India, Critical Pedagogical Studies in Indian Education System, Understanding Public Health Policies in India, Cultural Intelligence, Intergroup relations, Cross-Cultural Psychology, Emotional Recognition, Clinical disorders
Applied Philosophy, Environmental Ethics, Indigenous Philosophy, Existentialism, Phenomenology, Philosophy of Language, Indian Philosophy, Public Philosophy, Feminist Philosophy, Feminist phenomenology.
School of Infrastructure
Structural Dynamics, Earthquake Engineering, Self-centering Systems, Analysis and design of reinforced concrete structures, Dynamic Soil-Structure Interaction, Concrete Technology, Mechanics of laminated composites, Solid and Structural Mechanics, Topology optimization, Meta-materials, Modeling of brittle and ductile fracture, Modeling of Residual stress in composites, Building Information Modeling (BIM) with Mobile Robotic Platform (MRP), Retrofitting of heritage structures, Structural Health Monitoring; Machine Learning and Deep Learning; Computer Vision techniques; Digital twin engineering, Smart Materials and StructuresNon-local theory, and constitutive modelling, Energy efficient buildings, Static and dynamic instability of thin-walled structures.
Public Transportation, Non-motorized transportation, Green Transportation, Safety and Security aspects of Urban Traffic, Travel Behaviour, Traffic System Analysis, Transport Economics, Traffic Engineering, Intelligent Transportation System, Performance-Based Geometric Design of Highways, Road Safety, Alternative Materials for Road Construction, Bitumen Rheology and Ageing of Bitumen, Design of Low Energy Asphalt Mixes, Pavement Recycling, Design of Climate Resilient and Sustainable Pavements, Transportation Geotechnics, Pervious Concrete Pavements
Fluvial hydraulics, Hydrology, Watershed management, Flow through emergent and submerged rigid and flexible, Anthropogenic impacts on river basins, Physical and numerical modelling of flow and sediment transport; Application of Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) in hydraulic design, Remote sensing, Glaciology, Disaster risk management
Water and Wastewater Treatment, Solid Waste Management, waste to Energy Sustainable natural wastewater treatment.
School of Mechanical Sciences
Fluid Mechanics, Turbulence, Computational Fluid Dynamics, Large Eddy Simulation, Fluid-structure interaction, Aero and hydrodynamic propulsion, Heat Transfer, Inverse Heat Transfer, Two-Phase Heat Transfer, Bio-Heat Transfer, Thermal System Optimization, Radiation Heat Transfer in Participating Medium, Conjugate Heat Transfer, Thermal energy storage system, modeling of cryopreservation, Atmospheric Radiation, Remote Sensing, Electronics cooling and Thermal Management, Aerodynamics Flow Control, Flapping wings, Wind Turbine, Experimental Combustion, Energy Systems, Sustainable Fuels, Reacting & Non-Reacting Flow Diagnostics, Combustion Modelling.
Acoustics, Composite Materials, Sandwich Structures, Fracture Mechanics, Smart Composite Structures, Vibration, Solid Mechanics, Robotics, Biologically inspired robotics, Human assistive devices, Industrial Noise Control, Condition Monitoring, Multiscale methods for Fracture, Molecular Dynamics; Fracture in Multiphysics problems; structural dynamics, Non-linear elasticity, Mechanics of inflatable structures, Experimental modal analysis, Sensors, Discrete Element Modelling; Deformable granular materials; Discrete model for shape memory alloy, Biomedical image processing using Artificial Intelligence and Deep Learning, Autonomous underwater navigation and structural health monitoring using computer vision
Conventional Machining, Modelling & Simulation of Machining Processes, Sustainable Machining, Machining of Super alloys, Computer Aided Manufacturing, Cellular Manufacturing, Reverse Engineering, Laser Material Processing, Laser-based additive manufacturing/cladding, Pulse Heat Transfer in Manufacturing Analysis, Non-conventional Machining, Hybrid machining techniques, Machining of ceramic and hard materials, Surface texturing, Micro-machining and Tribology. Dissimilar high-strength alloy welding, Hot wire TIG welding of superalloys, Modelling of arc welding processes, residual stress and distortion control in welded structures, TIG cladding and laser treatment for cutting tool life enhancement, Residual stress control in multi-metallic wire arc additive manufacturing (WAAM), LVOF and HVOF based TBC and wear resistance coating, Modelling, and Friction stir welding (FSW) of Al and Mg alloys, FSW tool design, residual stress control in friction stir welded joints, investment casting of high-temperature alloys, manufacturability and synthesis of in-situ MMC of Al and Mg alloys, Incremental forming of hard metals, Post-processing of 3D-printed parts, Electrochemical 3D Printing (EC3DP), Metal Forming, Plasticity, Mechanical behavior of Materials.
School of Minerals, Metallurgical and Materials Engineering
Physical Metallurgy
Aluminium-based alloys and composites, Recycling of aluminium alloys, Semisolid metal processing, Processing, Characterization and Modelling of High Entropy Alloys; Light weight High Entropy Alloys; Metal – Metal composites; Specialty alloys for marine applications; Coatings for technological applications, Corrosion of advanced materials, Recrystallization behaviour and grain boundary engineering, High entropy alloy thin films, Yttria stabilised zirconia – CNT/graphene composites
Energy and functional materials
Photovoltaics with oxide perovskites and double-perovskites; Piezoelectric-polymer composites for energy harvesting; Materials for metal-ion batteries; Hydrogen storage materials; Energy materials, Batteries, Eletro-spraying, Multi-ferroic oxide solar cells and Conventional solar cells. Ab-initio studies in functional and energy materials, Thermoelectric materials (Inorganic and Organic) development, Thermal and electrical transport of thermoelectric materials, contact engineering of thermoelectric devices; bulk and flexible thermoelectric devices fabrication for energy harvesting, Biocomposites
Materials processing
Process metallurgy, Iron and Steel Making, Non-ferrous Extractive Metallurgy, Friction Stir Welding, Additive Manufacturing, Hydrogen based alternative ironmaking processes; Powder metallurgy of nanocrystalline materials, Surface engineering; Stainless steel and Ferroalloy Production, Hybrid joining;
Mechanical metallurgy
Severe plastic deformation of light metals and alloys, Strain-rate sensitivity in metals and alloys, Superplasticity, Virtual characterization using crystal plasticity based finite element modelling; Tribology of aluminium alloys; Mesoscale experimental mechanics; Creep and fatigue of advanced materials
Modelling, Simulation, Process control and Automation
Phase-field modelling of microstructural evolution; Computational thermodynamics (CALPHAD); Chaos analysis of dynamical systems; Kinetic and thermodynamic modeling of extractive Metallurgical processes; Process Optimization, Chaos control and dynamic process control, Nonlinear dynamical systems; Forming limit diagram prediction using crystal plasticity, Damage modelling using bond based theory in amorphous materials; Failure modelling in Al alloys using nano-void theory, Air dispersion modelling. Control in iron and steelmaking; Application of AI techniques; Coupled FEM-DEM modelling, First-principles density functional theory calculations, Molecular dynamics simulations