S
Sudip Chakraborty
Researcher at Harish-Chandra Research Institute
Publications - 428
Citations - 13018
Sudip Chakraborty is an academic researcher from Harish-Chandra Research Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Chemistry & Density functional theory. The author has an hindex of 51, co-authored 343 publications receiving 9319 citations. Previous affiliations of Sudip Chakraborty include University of California, Los Angeles & Indian Institute of Technology Indore.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
A review of polymeric membranes and processes for potable water reuse
David M. Warsinger,David M. Warsinger,Sudip Chakraborty,Sudip Chakraborty,Emily W. Tow,Megan H. Plumlee,Christopher Bellona,Savvina Loutatidou,Leila Karimi,Leila Karimi,Anne M. Mikelonis,Andrea Achilli,Abbas Ghassemi,Lokesh P. Padhye,Shane A. Snyder,Shane A. Snyder,Stefano Curcio,Chad D. Vecitis,Hassan A. Arafat,John H. Lienhard +19 more
TL;DR: Challenges still facing membrane-based potable reuse applications, including chemical and biological contaminant removal, membrane fouling, and public perception, are highlighted as areas in need of further research and development.
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Photothermal Membrane Distillation for Seawater Desalination
Antonio Politano,Pietro Argurio,Gianluca Di Profio,Vanna Sanna,Anna Cupolillo,Sudip Chakraborty,Hassan A. Arafat,Efrem Curcio,Efrem Curcio +8 more
TL;DR: Thermoplasmonic effects notably improve the efficiency of vacuum membrane distillation, an economically sustainable tool for high-quality seawater desalination.
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Remediation of textile effluents by membrane based treatment techniques: a state of the art review.
TL;DR: The present review paper elucidates the contributions of membrane technology towards textile effluent treatment and unexhausted raw materials recovery and various accounts dealing with techno-economic evaluation of these membrane based textile wastewater treatment processes have been provided.
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Increased dry-season length over southern Amazonia in recent decades and its implication for future climate projection
Rong Fu,Lei Yin,Wenhong Li,Paola A. Arias,Robert E. Dickinson,Lei Huang,Sudip Chakraborty,Katia Fernandes,Brant Liebmann,Rosie A. Fisher,Ranga B. Myneni +10 more
TL;DR: It is observed that the dry-season length over southern Amazonia has increased significantly since 1979, primarily owing to a delay of its ending dates (dry-season end, DSE), and is accompanied by a prolonged fire season.