Web page: http://www.met.kth.se/index.php?dfile=demp/home.php
Contact person: Professor K
V Rao, phone: +46
(0)8 790 7771
Research related to South Asia
Prof. K.V. Rao is Research
leader for the following projects, all funded by Vinnova, European
Commission, Swedish Research Council and others, carried out
at the Division of Engineering Material Physics:
• A network on nanostructured materials
• Advanced
materials for future electronics – spintronics
• Advanced nanostructured
thermoelectrics for space applications
• Deposition of nanostructured
magnetic materials using ink-jet technology
• Force Microscopy studies
of high performance nanophase materials
• High temperature superconductors
Instrumentation for in-plane local susceptibility determination
and imaging
• Magnetic large scale integrated systems
• Mechanics of
outer hair cells as the basis for auditory function
• Novel magnetism
at bulk glassy dimensions
• Novel multifunctional oxide sensor materials
for monitoring environment
• High temperature superconductors.
More information to be found on http://www.met.kth.se/index.php?lang=sv&dfile=demp/projects.php
Prof. K.V. Rao participated in the SASNET
workshop on ”The role of South Asia
in the internationalisation of higher education in Sweden” held
in Stockholm 28-29 November 2006, where he gave a presentation
about the strong interaction with Indian universities that KTH
and his own department has been involved in for many years. Prof.
Rao made his presentation in the session about ”Sending
students to South Asia”. Read
Prof. Rao’s presentation at the workshop (as a pdf-file)
In November 2004 Prof Rao
received SEK 650 000 as a three year grant (2005-07) from the Swedish
Research Links programme (funded by Sida and the Swedish Research
Council) for an project titled ”Novel
Multifunctional Oxide Sensor materials for Monitoring Environment”.
It was a collaborative project with the Theoretical Sciences Unit
at Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for
Advanced Scientific Research in
Bangalore, India (contact person: Prof. Umesh
V. Waghmare).
On the Swedish side Associate Professor
Rajeev Ahuja from
the Department of Physics, Uppsala University,
was also involved in the project.
Summary of the project: The technology
of Electronic Information Storage, and capabilities to control
the environmental needs via Smart Sensors exploiting computers
and novel microprocessors, has now reached even the remotest parts
of the Globe. Future developments in electronics, called Spintronics,
is predicted to introduce new functionalities to all current electronic
components and thus form the basis of faster computers with much
lower energy consumption. One important requirement for Spintronics
to be meaningful is the need for above room temperature magnetic
semiconductors. At KTH we have recently made a break through by
discovering such a material (by doping ZnO with Mn ) which was
published in October 2003 issue of Nature Materials. Almost simultaneously
Prof. Waghmare from JNCASR, Bangalore, India, predicted on a theoretical
basis, that such doped material can be a multifunctional versatile
Sensor because of the enhanced piezo-electric property which is
useful in developing a variety of transducers and sensors. We wish
to combine our capabilities to develop novel sensors useful for
future developments in electronic environmental monitoring. Exchange
of ideas, visits, and strengthening our mutual complimentary expertise
among theorists and experimentalists both at KTH and JNCASR will
be the mode of co-operation.
•Dr. Lioubov
Belova is
also a scientist within
the Division of Engineering Material Physics, working with projetcs
related to nanotechnology. In
November 2005 she received SEK 450 000 as a three year grant (2006-08)
from the Swedish Research Links programme (funded by Sida and the
Swedish Research Council) for another project to be carried out
in collaboration with Indian partners. The project is titled ”Synthesis & Characterization
of tailored magnetic nanoparticles for biomedical applications”. More information on the Swedish Research
Links grants 2005.
The South Asian partner in the project was Professor R
V Upadhyay at the
Centre for Excellence in Nanotechnology of Nanomagnetic Particles-CENNP,
Department of Physics, Bhavnagar University, Gujarat, India.
As part
of this research project, the National
Workshop on Nanotechnology & Nanoscience of Magnetic Particles
for Biomedical Applications (NNMPBA-07) was held
in Bhavnagar, Gujarat, India, 29 January – 1 February 2007. It was the
first workshop sponsored under the Swedish-Asia-Link programme. Prof. K.V. Rao
and Dr. Belova from KTH will participated in the workshop, during which Prof.
Rao gave a speech on “New
trends in Nanoscience enabling novel technologies”. More
information about the workshop (as a pdf-file).
At the 2009 MRS (Materials Research Society) Fall Meeting, held in Boston, USA, 30 November – 4 december 2009, Prof. K V Rao, Dr. Lioubov Belova, Dr. Shashi Kiran and Dr. Tarja Volotinen from the Division of Engineering Material Physics, KTH, presents a paper based on the Swedish Research Links programme funded research project mentioned above. The 2009 MRS fall meeting is a symposium with the theme ”Future Challenges and Prospects in
Nanobiotechnology and Nanobiophotonics”. The paper is entitled ”A Photoluminescence Study on the Growth Kinetics of Gold Nanoparticles and Reducing Ability of Medicinal Plant Extracts”. It is a dynamic study of a process for recovering Gold (Au) in the form of
nanoparticles from toxic solutions using medicinal plant extracts
from South Kanara, India. This work was carried out
by the above-mentioned researchers in collaboration with Dr. L D’Souza, Director for the Laboratory of Applied Biology, St Aloysius College, Mangalore, during the period April – May 2008. More information.
Abstract: Most of the printed circuit boards in computers,
mobile phones, and compact electronic gadgets
contain Gold or high purity Cu, or sometimes
Ag contact stripes for wiring. These are junked in
huge quantities every year with the failed units for
various reasons. Often these precious contact elements
are recovered by treating the boards with acids, and
toxic chemical to dissolve them off. To recover this
Au, from the solution (like say Auric acid) additional
chemical processes that are not environmentally friendly.
Our paper
is an environmentally friendly, inexpensive and non toxic way
to recover Au in the form of nanoparticles using antioxidant
medicinal plants from Western Ghats, India some
of which have been identified from around Mangalore.
In our paper we show that we have recovered Au nano
particles from a few nanometers to 100 nanometers or
more enough to drop down in the solution because Au is heavy.
Our paper is about the kinetics of the reduction process
and how fast we can get the Au-particles (a few seconds)
and how the particles grow with time in the solutiion.
We use dynamic in-situ photoluminescence measurements
to show the kinetics of the activity. In principle, if we develop this technology it can be a good
environmentally friendly way to commercialize Au nanoparticles,
for textiles, high tech demands for plating various substrates
with Au films etc. If we develop similar studies for other
precious metals like high purity Cu, Ag it could be a good and
self sustaining venture....