Faculty Dr Nirmalendu Sekhar Mishra

Assistant Professor

Dr Nirmalendu Sekhar Mishra

Department of Environmental Science and Engineering

Interests
  • Adsorption
  • Advanced Oxidation Processes
  • Nanomaterials for Energy and Environmental Applications
Faculty Dr Nirmalendu Sekhar Mishra
Education
2013
B.Tech
IGIT Sarang
2016
M.Tech
IIT Dhanbad
2023
PhD
IIT Dhanbad
Experience
  • Jan–May, 2024 – Assistant Prof. (Contract) – VSSUT, Burla
  • July–Nov, 2023 – Postdoctoral Researcher – Kwangwoon University, South Korea
  • Jan–May, 2023 – Assistant Prof. (Contract) – VSSUT, Burla
  • April–July 2018 – Research Intern – NTUST, Taipei
Research Interests
  • Fabrication and characterization of nanomaterials (transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs), Oxides (TMOs) and metal free nanomaterials leading to energy and environmental applications (Adsorption Photocatalysis, Hybrid AOPs, and Solar Fuels)
  • Semiconductor hetero-structures, charge transfer pathways and their characterizations.
  • Contaminant remediation (Water and waste water treatment)
Awards & Fellowships
  • 2014 – GATE FELLOWSHIP – MHRD
  • 2016 – Ph.D. FELLOWSHIP – MHRD
  • 2018 – Research Internship – TEEP, Govt. Of Taiwan
  • 2023 – Young Scientist Grant – DST SERB
  • 2023 – ITS Grant – DST SERB
  • 2023 – AIChE Foundation Grant – AIChE
Memberships
No data available
Publications
  • Sustainable Utilization of Waste Motor Oil: A Hazardous Hydrocarbon Pollutant

    Dr Nirmalendu Sekhar Mishra

    Source Title: Environmental Science and Engineering, DOI Link, View abstract ⏷

    The rapid population, industrialization, and urbanization increase have led to a multi-fold increase in automobiles, thereby increasing the demand for lubricating oil. Among the available lubricants, automotive lubricating oil (motor oil) accounts for 57% of global lubricant demand, which is used to lubricate vehicular engine’s metal parts, reducing wear and increasing engine efficiency. However, with usage, it degrades due to (i) oxidation, (ii) thermal breakdown, (iii) micro-dieseling, (iv) additive depletion, and demands alteration with fresh motor oil. This chapter aims to discuss the characteristics of fresh and waste motor oil. Besides, it extensively explains the impact of waste motor oil (WMO) on water bodies, marine life, soil, and human health due to illegal disposal to overcome high waste management costs. Furthermore, it also focuses on the WMO hierarchy and suggests different treatment methods based on the hierarchy. However, among the available treatment methods, pyrolysis has drawn notice due to its adaptability and product diversification. © The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2025.
Contact Details

nirmalendusekhar.m@srmap.edu.in

Scholars