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Research

Niladri had been involved in multidisciplinary projects with various academic and government institutions. His most notable research work was undertaken in collaboration with NASA, where he studied the implications for prebiotic chemistry and exobiology on outer planet's and their moons. His research culminated in the wildly successful Cassini-Huygens orbiter and lander missions to the Saturnian system.

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​Niladri also provided technical assistance to NASA/JPL engineering teams on scientific aspects of next generation space missions and worked on laboratory experiments for the detection of signs of astrobiology and the conditions behind the origin of life on earth.

 

For his Ph.D. dissertation, Niladri was a pioneer to work on the first systematic experiments into thermodynamic data that would ultimately replace combustion engines with environmentally-benign hydrogen fuel cells.​​​

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Selected Scientific Publications

​Fluorescence spectra of Titan tholins: in-situ detection of astrobiologically interesting areas on Titan's surface Link

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Organic Environments on Saturn’s Moon, Titan: Simulating Chemical Reactions and Analyzing Products by FT-ICR and Ion-Trap Mass Spectrometry Link

 

Titan Aerosol Analogues: Analysis of the Nonvolatile Tholins Link

 

Synthesis and Characterization of Binucleating Bis(amidinate) Ligands and Their Dialuminum Complexes Link

 

Thermodynamic Studies of Hydride Transfer for a Series of Niobium and Tantalum Compounds Link

Thermodynamic and Kinetic Studies of Hydride Transfer for a Series of Molybdenum and Tungsten Hydrides Link

Hydride and Proton Transfer Reactions of Niobium-Bound Ligands. Synthetic and Thermodynamic Studies of Ketene, Enacyl, and Vinylketene Complexes Link

 

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Brief Research Summary

University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ | NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), Pasadena, CA

Modeling of Titan's atmosphere through experimental and theoretical simulations

Development of chiral sensor technology and chiral “noses” to sniff out potential signs of life

Investigation into the conditions for the origin of life on earth

University of Colorado, Boulder, CO

Synthesis of novel bi-dentate Lewis acids

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Wesleyan University, Middletown, CT

Systematic studies on the thermodynamics of metal hydride transfers

Clark University, Worcester, MA

Construction of cryogenic instruments to assist in low temperature (-269 to -196 deg Celsius) magnetic measurements

Development of isolation techniques for one of the world’s most powerful molecular magnets

Building molecular architecture with novel metals in two- and three-dimensional lattices

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