Verizon India and IIT-Madras announce merit cum means scholarship

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CHENNAI: Verizon India has launched a merit cum means scholarship called V PROPEL (V Provide Right Opportunity to Power Enabled Learning) in association with IIT-Madras for meritorious students from economically disadvantaged backgrounds to pursue BSc in programming and data science.

VPROPEL aims at supporting meritorious students whose annual family income is less than Rs 1 lakh. Through this scholarship programme, select students will receive financial assistance for four academic terms.

Launched in 2020 by IIT-M’s BSc in programming and data science aims at eliminating barriers of age, discipline or geographic location and provide access to a world-class curriculum to aspirants in programming and data science.

Verizon India is the first corporate to partner with IIT-Madras to support this initiative with an objective to aid the learning journey of students from economically disadvantaged families.

This virtual learning programme will be offered in three different stages – foundation level, diploma level and degree level.

“With this initiative in collaboration with a premier institute like IIT- Madras, we aim to provide a platform for students to build a career in programming and data science which is a future-focussed domain and equip them with the knowledge and skills to become successful data scientists and data engineers of tomorrow,” Vijayaraman Subramanian, MD, Verizon India, said.

“According to the US Bureau of Labor Statistics, data science is one of the fastest growing sectors that is predicted to create 11.5 million jobs by 2026. The World Economic Forum predicts that by 2022, data analysts and scientists will be the most emerging job roles, globally. Hence, we chose a specialization in programming and data science,” Mahesh Panchagnula, dean (alumni and corporate relations), IIT-Madras, said.

For more details about the course, visit: https://onlinedegree.iitm.ac.in.



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Nanosheets help in the detection of uric acid in urine, alcohol in breath

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Mass spectrometry is an importantat tool and has helped win several Nobel Prizes. It provides valuable information about the composition and structure of molecules and has found applications from drug testing to carbon dating. Using this, researchers can ionise or break down the compound into simple ions and then identify the molecules based on their masses. The current process of ionisation requires electrical potential of a few kilo volts, heat or high energy ultraviolet lasers (UV-lasers). But now, researchers have developed a new method of soft ionisation using nanosheets which eliminates the need for external energy sources completely.

Sheet-like structures

The team used a simple filter paper as a support material and coated this with 2D molybdenum disulphide (MoS2). “The 2D materials are sheet-like structures and graphene is a perfect example. You pull out sheets of carbon and create graphene. Similarly, this molybdenum disulphide was created as a thin sheet and spread on a paper. This modified paper produces an electric current when liquids flow over it,” explains Thalappil Pradeep from the Department of Chemistry at the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Madras. He is the corresponding author of the work published last week in ACS Nano.

The team observed that a flow of pure methanol over the nanosheet generates a record-high current of 1.3 microampere. The sample to be tested can be mixed with this methanol, and the induced current helps make ions of the compound to be tested.

The team then tested the device to measure uric acid. By simply flowing raw urine (about 5 microlitre) over the nanostructured surface and measuring the corresponding current (with no other stimulus), the team detected the uric acid in the urine of a healthy individual.

They also demonstrated that the device can be used as a self-energised disposable sensor for breath alcohol detection. The device was modified in such a way that the breath of a drunken person can interact directly with the flowing liquid on the MoS2-coated surface. A volunteer who had consumed 650 mL of beer containing 9% (v/v) alcohol blew over the paper, and the corresponding current was measured. While standard breath analysers detect breath alcohol concentration above 5%, this device could detect even less than 3%.

Many applications

“The device can find many more applications: check glucose in blood, toxic chemicals in any liquid, pesticide or any contaminants in drinking water. The main plus point is that it can even detect very low levels. The current wet chemical or reagent-based methods are lengthy and require skilled labour. The new method is cost-effective, and all you need is simple paper coated with nanostructures. By just flowing the liquid and studying the spectrum, molecular detection has now been made simple and easy,” adds the first author of the paper Pallab Basuri, a PhD scholar at the institute.

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PM Narendra Modi inaugurates ‘discovery campus’ of IIT-Madras

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Prime Minister Narendra Modi today virtually inaugurated the discovery campus of Indian Institute of Technology (IIT Madras). Other dignitaries — Gornor Banwarilal Purohit, Chief Minister Edappadi K Palaniswami were present in the occasion.

According to IIT-Madras, the campus at Thaiyur will accommodate the growing research infrastructure requirements of students and faculty. “This satellite campus of IIT Madras will host state-of-the-art standalone research centres with large dedicated facilities and will have its own support infrastructure such as hostels for the research scholars and fellows, common instrumentation laboratories, and conference facilities, among other amenities,” the institute release read.

The campus will soon have two operational research centres – National Technology Centre for Ports, Waterways and Coasts, funded by Ministry of Ports, Shipping and Waterways. The centre will have first large ‘Shallow Water Basin’ facility for coastal and estuarine research and industrial applications.

Another research centre Solid Propellant Combustion Modelling Facility by the DRDO will also come up. Both the centres will be functional by the end of this year.

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