N
Nikhil R. Jana
Researcher at Indian Association for the Cultivation of Science
Publications - 204
Citations - 21594
Nikhil R. Jana is an academic researcher from Indian Association for the Cultivation of Science. The author has contributed to research in topics: Nanoparticle & Nanorod. The author has an hindex of 58, co-authored 193 publications receiving 19740 citations. Previous affiliations of Nikhil R. Jana include Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur & University of Arkansas.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Induced Aggregation of AIE-Active Mono-Cyclometalated Ir(III) Complex into Supramolecular Branched Wires for Light-Emitting Diodes
Subrata Maji,Parvej Alam,Gundam Sandeep Kumar,Sandip Biswas,Piyush Kanti Sarkar,Bidisa Das,Ishita Rehman,Benu Brata Das,Nikhil R. Jana,Inamur Rahaman Laskar,Somobrata Acharya +10 more
TL;DR: Unique aggregation properties of an AIE-active complex into branched supramolecular wires are reported for the first time and this study opens up the need of ordered assembly of AIE complexes to achieve optimal luminescence characteristics.
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Galactose Multivalency Effect on the Cell Uptake Mechanism of Bioconjugated Nanoparticles
Chumki Dalal,Nikhil R. Jana +1 more
TL;DR: It is shown that the receptor mediated cellular internalization of galactose terminated nanoparticles depends on Galactose multivalency, and cellular interaction and uptake kinetics of nanoparticles increase with increasing galactOSE multivalencies.
Posted Content
Fluorescent Carbon Nanoparticle: Synthesis, Characterization and Bio-imaging Application
TL;DR: These CNPs are nano-crystalline with predominantly graphitic structure and shows green fluorescence under UV exposure and fluorescence property of these particles can be used for fluorescence based cell imaging application.
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Arginine-Terminated Nanoparticles of <10 nm Size for Direct Membrane Penetration and Protein Delivery for Straight Access to Cytosol and Nucleus.
Prasanta Panja,Nikhil R. Jana +1 more
TL;DR: It is shown that arginine-terminated Au nanoparticle of < 10 nm size enters via energy-independent direct membrane penetration but as the size increases, the nanoparticle switches to energy-dependent endocytotic uptake.
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Chitosan−Cholesterol-Based Cellular Delivery of Anionic Nanoparticles
Amit Ranjan Maity,Nikhil R. Jana +1 more
TL;DR: Cholesterol-modified chitosan oligosaccharide is reported as a nontoxic reagent that is able to deliver different anionic nanoparticles into the cell and the optimum amount of cholesterol is decisive as an effective reagent.