Friday, January 06, 2006

Details of Loyola Chemistry Alumni settled all over the world...

We have created a new section with details of Loyola Chemistry Alumni who have settled in various positions all over the world. This section is unique, and based on the information obtained from public domain and will provide an insight into their career success thereby motivation for budding chemists. The webmasters have limited time browsing the internet for information and will greatly appreciate contributions from all Loyola Chemistry Alumni. (See the navigation bar for links)

Thursday, January 05, 2006

Year:2005 journal publications by Prof. K.S. Nagaraja...

Pokhrel S, Dhakshinamoorthy A, Sundaram R, Nagaraja KS
Crystal growth and characterization of PbI2-AgI binary system
CRYSTAL RESEARCH AND TECHNOLOGY 40 (8): 752-756 AUG 2005

Pokhrel S, Nagaraja KS, Varghese B
Preparation, characterization, and X-ray structure analysis of 1,4-diazabicyclo2,2,2-octane (DABCO) and ammonium cation with tetrathiomolybdate anion
JOURNAL OF STRUCTURAL CHEMISTRY 45 (5): 900-905 SEP-OCT 2004

Deepa B, Balasubramanian N, Nagaraja KS
Spectrophotometric determination of hydrazine
ASIAN JOURNAL OF CHEMISTRY 17 (2): 1140-1146 APR-JUN 2005

Deepa B, Nagaraja KS, Balasubramanian N
Spectrophotometric determination of sulfamic acid in metal sulfamate bath effluents
PLATING AND SURFACE FINISHING 92 (4): 54-57 APR 2005

Arockiasamy S, Premkumar PA, Sreedharan OM, Nagaraja KS et al.
Standard enthalpy of fusion of N,N '-ethylenebis (2,4-pentanedion-iminoato)nickel(II) complex by DTA-based melting point depression studies
MATERIALS LETTERS 59 (11): 1334-1337 MAY 2005

Year:2005 journal publications by Prof. V. Alexander...

Jebasingh B, Alexander V
Synthesis and relaxivity studies of a tetranuclear gadolinium(III) complex of DO3A as a contrast-enhancing agent for MRI
INORGANIC CHEMISTRY 44 (25): 9434-9443 DEC 12 2005

Ratnakar SJ, Alexander V
Synthesis and relaxivity studies of a Gadolinium(III) complex of ATP-conjugated DO3A as a contrast enhancing agent for MRI
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF INORGANIC CHEMISTRY (19): 3918-3927 OCT 7 2005

Rajalakshmanan E, Alexander V
Synthesis of dimethylbipyridines by the reductive coupling of 2-halomethylpyridines with nickel catalyst
SYNTHETIC COMMUNICATIONS 35 (6): 891-895 2005

Wednesday, January 04, 2006

Get well soon, Fr Ceyrac...



Father Pierre Ceyrac, S.J (born 1914) left France in 1936 and for over 60 years has worked for the poor and the needy. He has also served refugees in strife-torn Rwanda and in Cambodia. He takes care of the basic needs of some 18,000 poor and abandoned children in Tamil Nadu. He works for the cause of women, peasants and Dalits and all this, so quietly. In Nov 2003, Fr Ceyrac was honoured with "le grand prix de l'Académie universelle des cultures", a high award from President Jacques Chirac of France.

When I was in Loyola hostel, I use to wonder why the poorest of the poor, the sick and the neglected line up the Jesuit Residence, sometimes extending up to Choolaimedu subway. Asha Krishnakumar, who interviewed Fr Ceyrac for Frontline writes:

“In the middle of the conversation he took a little time off to talk with one of his six lieutenants about the progress of some work in Sivaganga district. And then, with the same enthusiasm he met a couple of leprosy patients who had come seeking medical help. Putting his arms around their shoulders, he listened to their problems patiently and promised help. And, then, as he saw them off, he shook their hands. "More than giving them money it is the hand-shake and respect that matters most to them," Fr. Ceyrac then remarked.”

No wonder people flocked to see their good shepherd. Unfortunately, Fr Ceyrac had a fall while at Loyola and since then been transfered and treated at the military hospital of Paris. He had a second fall in France and is recovering. Get well soon and God bless Fr Ceyrac...

Read more about Fr Ceyrac here.

A nice photo of Loyola Chapel...

I found this beautiful picture of the entrance to the 'Christ the King' chapel at Loyola College in another blog CoffeeHouse, maintained by Ramnath. (click the image to enlarge)

Loyola Enviro Club has a new site...

The Enviro Club of Loyola has a new site which can be viewed from here. The contents are good but personally I think the design is quite sluggish. Nevertheless, congratulations to the Enviro Club for hosting a useful site.

Tuesday, January 03, 2006

Abstract of an article Published by Rev. L. M. Yeddanapalli in 1942

The Decomposition of Methane in Glow Discharge at Liquid-Air Temperature
Lourdu M. Yeddanapalli
Physical Chemistry Laboratory, Louvain University, Belgium, and
Frick Chemical Laboratory, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey
(Received February 13, 1942)

The decomposition of methane in the glow discharge at liquid-air temperature has been investigated under different experimental conditions. Contrary to the earlier conclusion of Brewer and Kueck that the reaction products are only hydrogen and ethylene, they are invariably found to be hydrogen, a polymer of composition (CH2)n, and ethane, ethylene, and acetylene, the last three resulting presumably from the mutual interaction of the primary active species CH4+, CH3+, CH2+, CH+ formed from methane. In the absence of hydrogen, ethane predominates; in its presence, ethylene and acetylene proportions increase due, it is suggested, to the dehydrogenating action of atomic hydrogen. In the negative glow, the rate of methane decomposition is directly proportional to the current, and the electronic efficiency, i.e., the number of methane molecules decomposed per electronic charge, is ~10 both for alternating and direct current. In the positive column, the rate is directly proportional to current only if pressure and field strength are constant; with constant current, the rate increases with pressure and field strength but in a manner which does not lend itself at present to a quantitative expression; the electronic efficiency is ~0.2 for alternating and ~0.6 for direct current. The results lead to the conclusion that a 60-cycle alternating current discharge approximates closely to that with direct current. These may be explained by considerations of the electrical energies involved. No marked difference in reaction rate or products is observed by substituting iron for aluminum electrodes, or by variation in current density. A certain chemical activity might be attributed to the Faraday dark space.
(C) The Journal of Chemical Physics -- Volume 10(5), pp. 249-260 (1942)

Rev Fr Lourdu M Yeddanapalli award of 2005

Dr. Khan of IICT has been selected by the committee appointed by the President, Catalysis Society of India (CSI) for the Rev Fr Lourdu M Yeddanapalli award of 2005. The Rev Fr Lourdu M Yeddanapalli award, instituted by Prof. J.C. Kuriacose to perpetuate the memory of this great Jesuit priest who has contributed to the field of catalysis in India. Fr Yeddanapalli has been responsible for the initial research in catalysis in India and several of his students have been and are occupying responsible positions in the India and abroad.