• Sign In
  • Sign Up
iScience
  • Blogs
  • Pages
  • Articles
  • Notes
  • Thesis
  • News
  • Presentations
  • SciForum
  • Events
  • Groups
  • Jobs

Vijendra Fulwa

HAPPY DIWALI TO ALL..........

Member Info

  • Member Type: Ph.D. Student
  • Networks: Ph.D. Students
  • Profile Views: 1,321 views
  • Friends: 24 friends
  • Last Update: February 18
  • Joined: December 2, -1

Contacts

See All (24)
Bhupender Singh
Manoj Mahala
Madhu Gill
Vanya Srivastav
srtchem05
Atiya Fatima
Jagvir Suhag
Parveen Bazard
Akash Jain

Likes

  • An introducti...
    The lok & Pal...
  • 2 likes
  • Profile
  • Updates
  • Blogs(1)
  • Groups(4)
  • Links(1)
  • Forum Posts(1)
  • Albums(3)

Personal Info

  • First Name Vijendra
  • Last Name Fulwa
  • Gender Male
  • Birthday September 8, 1984

About

  • University/Institute IITG
  • Department chemistry

Contact Info

  • Address IIT-guwahati

Education

  • Thesis title Transition Metal Chemistry of Nitrogen-Rich ligands
  • Education B.Sc S.K.collage, Sikar<br>M.Sc Poddar collage nawalgarh, juhujhunu.<br>P.hd IIT-guwahati. assam

Publications

  • Journal Papers Novel synthesis of 2,4-bis(2-pyridyl)-5-(pyridyl)imidazoles and formation of<br>N-(3-(pyridyl)imidazo[1,5-a]pyridine)picolinamidines: nitrogen-rich ligands<br>Vijendra Kumar Fulwa,<br>Tetrahedron Letters 50 (2009) 6264–6267
  • Vijendra Fulwa
    Vijendra Fulwa → Vanya Srivastav: Write Something...
    • October 18, 2010
  • Manoj Mahala
    Manoj Mahala: Wish you a very happy birthday (sorry for being late :) )
    • September 9, 2010
  • Vijendra Fulwa
    Vijendra Fulwa → srtchem05: thank you ...............
    how r u ???????????????
    • September 8, 2010
  • srtchem05
    srtchem05: Wishing you many many returns of the day......................
    • September 8, 2010
  • Vijendra Fulwa
    Vijendra Fulwa → Bhupender Singh: thank you
    • September 1, 2010
  • Vijendra Fulwa
    Vijendra Fulwa → Bhupender Singh: hi
    can u send one paper i give mail to u in gmail .
    • September 1, 2010
  • Vijendra Fulwa
    Vijendra Fulwa → Atiya Fatima: hiiiiiiiiiiii
    • August 28, 2010
  • Vijendra Fulwa
    Vijendra Fulwa → Priya Dwivedi: hi
    • August 5, 2010
  • Vijendra Fulwa
    Vijendra Fulwa → Bhagyashri Shinde: hiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
    • June 15, 2010
  • Vijendra Fulwa
    Vijendra Fulwa → Spandana Kalasamudram: hiiiiiiiiiiii
    • May 8, 2010
  • Manoj Mahala
    Manoj Mahala: ok...
    • January 29, 2010
  • Vijendra Fulwa
    Vijendra Fulwa → Deepali Patro: hiiii
    • January 28, 2010
  • Manoj Mahala
    Manoj Mahala: that is great to know. Where is his office? I belong to village called "Phephana" in hanumangarh distt.
    • January 28, 2010
  • Manoj Mahala
    Manoj Mahala: I am basically from hanumangarh. Studied in CLC for one year. BTech from Jharkhand and Now in IISc
    • January 28, 2010
  • Manoj Mahala
    Manoj Mahala: hello vijendraji
    how are you?
    I can see in your profile that you graduated from SK College Sikar, are you native of sikar or nawalgarh? Just want to know more about you?
    Regards,
    Manoj
    • January 28, 2010
View More
Loading ...
  • must read this

    Posted January 5

    Chemist faces criminal charges after researcher’s death UCLA scientist charged three years after lab fire fatality. Richard Van Noorden 28 December 2011 Article toolsPrint Email Rights and Permissions Share/bookmark Connotea Facebook Delicious Twitter Digg Friendfeed Three years after a young ...

View All Entries
  • SPECTROSCOPY
    24 members
    Hi friends, personally i found spectroscopic techniques very interesting ( may be because i am working in one of this field !!) ranging from Raman spectroscopy ( INDIAN ORIGIN !!) to Infrared, Ultrafast Laser spectroscopy and so on, these techniques are very helpful to characterises any material solid, liquid or gas.
  • PostDoc Researcher
    9 members
  • coordination chemistry
    8 members
    All researcher working in the field of coordination chemistry, synthesis of ligands, hydrogen bonding, catalysis and exploring for organic and inorganic chemistry welcome to join this group.
  • Wall of Innovative Idea!!
    4 members
Previous
Next
  • Leaving Facebook... | Facebook
    Facebook is a social utility that connects people with friends and others who work, study and live around them. People use Facebook to keep up with friends, upload an unlimited number of photos, post links and videos, and learn more about the people they
Previous
Next
  • April 24, 2011 8:14:04 PM TLT
    in the topic THE PHD FACTORY in the forum Current Science
    INDIA: PHDS WANTED In 2004, India produced around 5,900 science, technology and engineering PhDs, a figure that has now grown to some 8,900 a year. This is still a fraction of the number from China and the United States, and the country wants many more, to match the explosive growth of its economy and population. The government is making major investments in research and higher education — including a one-third increase in the higher-education budget in 2011–12 — and is trying to attract investment from foreign universities. The hope is that up to 20,000 PhDs will graduate each year by 2020, says Thirumalachari Ramasami, the Indian government’s head of science and technology. Those targets ought to be easy to reach: India’s population is young, and undergraduate education is booming (see Nature 472, 24–26; 2011). But there is little incentive to continue into a lengthy PhD programme, and only around 1% of undergraduates currently do so. Most are intent on securing jobs in industry, which require only an undergraduate degree and are much more lucrative than the public-sector academic and research jobs that need postgraduate education. Students "don’t think of PhDs now, not even master’s — a bachelor’s is good enough to get a job", says Amit Patra, an engineer at the Indian Institute of Technology in Kharagpur. Even after a PhD, there are few academic opportunities in India, and better-paid industry jobs are the major draw. "There is a shortage of PhDs and we have to compete with industry for that resource — the universities have very little chance of winning that game," says Patra. For many young people intent on postgraduate education, the goal is frequently to go to the United States or Europe. That was the course chosen by Manu Prakash, who went to MIT for his PhD and now runs his own experimental biophysics lab at Stanford University in California. "When I went through the system in India, the platform for doing long-term research I didn’t feel was well-supported," he says. ■ This post was edited by Bhupender Singh at April 24, 2011 8:14:04 PM TLT
Previous
Next
  • Wall Photo­s 0 photos

  • Untitled A­lbum 2 photos

  • tawang tri­p 4 photos

Previous
Next
Copyright © iscience.in
Copyright ©2012  -  Contact  -  Mobile Site