Institution
National Aerospace Laboratories
Facility•Bengaluru, India•
About: National Aerospace Laboratories is a facility organization based out in Bengaluru, India. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Coating & Corrosion. The organization has 1838 authors who have published 2349 publications receiving 36888 citations.
Topics: Coating, Corrosion, Mach number, Sputter deposition, Aerodynamics
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors reported the synthesis of nanostructured porous hollow nickel telluride nanosheets and their use as bifunctional electrocatalyst towards hydrogen and oxygen evolution reaction.
80 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, a thermosetting epoxy-polymer was modified by incorporating 9 wt% of carboxyl-terminated butadiene-acrylonitrile rubber microparticles and 10 wt percent of silica nanoparticles.
Abstract: A thermosetting epoxy-polymer was modified by incorporating 9 wt% of carboxyl-terminated butadiene-acrylonitrile rubber microparticles and 10 wt% of silica nanoparticles. The tensile fatigue behavi...
80 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, single-phase CrN and CrAlN coatings were applied on silicon and mild steel substrates using a reactive DC magnetron sputtering system and the structural characterization of the coatings was done using X-ray diffraction (XRD).
80 citations
01 Jan 1995
TL;DR: In this paper, the National Research Council formed an international committee to examine the orbital debris issue, and the committee was asked to draw upon available data and analyses to characterize the current debris environment, project how this environment might change in the absence of new measures to alleviate debris proliferation, examine ongoing alleviation activities, explore measures to address the problem, and develop recommendations on technical methods to solve it.
Abstract: To acquire an unbiased technical assessment of (1) the research needed to better understand the debris environment, (2) the necessity and means of protecting spacecraft against the debris environment, and (3) potential methods of reducing the future debris hazard, NASA asked the National Research Council to form an international committee to examine the orbital debris issue. The committee was asked to draw upon available data and analyses to: characterize the current debris environment, project how this environment might change in the absence of new measures to alleviate debris proliferation, examine ongoing alleviation activities, explore measures to address the problem, and develop recommendations on technical methods to address the problems of debris proliferation.
77 citations
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TL;DR: The results showed that incorporation of Li(+), Na(+) and K(+) in to Gd(2)O(3):Eu(3+) phosphor would lead to a remarkable increase of photoluminescence.
77 citations
Authors
Showing all 1850 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Harish C. Barshilia | 46 | 236 | 6825 |
K.S. Rajam | 42 | 83 | 4765 |
Kozo Fujii | 39 | 411 | 5845 |
Parthasarathi Bera | 39 | 136 | 5329 |
R.P.S. Chakradhar | 36 | 166 | 4423 |
T. N. Guru Row | 36 | 309 | 5186 |
Takashi Ishikawa | 36 | 154 | 5019 |
Henk A. P. Blom | 34 | 168 | 5992 |
S. Ranganathan | 33 | 211 | 5660 |
S.T. Aruna | 33 | 101 | 4954 |
Arun M. Umarji | 33 | 207 | 3582 |
Vinod K. Gaur | 33 | 92 | 4003 |
Keisuke Asai | 31 | 350 | 3914 |
K. J. Vinoy | 30 | 240 | 3423 |
Gangan Prathap | 30 | 241 | 3466 |