ANNUAL REPORT वार्षिक प्रर्िवेदन - LNMIIT

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ANNUAL REPORT ACADEMIC YEAR 2020-21 वाषिक िवेदन शैिक वषि २०२०-२१

Transcript of ANNUAL REPORT वार्षिक प्रर्िवेदन - LNMIIT

ANNUAL REPORT

ACADEMIC YEAR 2020-21

वार्षिक प्रर्िवेदन

शैक्षर्िक वषि २०२०-२१

CONTENTS

Sections Page No.

1. Introduction 1

1.1. About the Institute 1

1.2. Best Practices at LNMIIT 3

1.3. Services during COVID-19 Pandemic 4

1.4. Campus Location 9

1.5. Strategic Plan (2020-2035) 9

1.6. Administration 13

2. Academic Programmes 15

2.1. Undergraduate Programmes 16

2.2. Post Graduate Programmes 18

2.3. Doctoral Programme 19

2.4. Development of Curriculum/Curriculum Reforms 20

2.5. Admissions 31

2.6. Existing Strength of UG/PG/PhD Programme 35

2.7. Examination and Evaluations 38

2.8. Online Classes, Examination and Evaluation 39

2.9. Scholarships and Financial Assistance 40

2.10. Convocation 2020 47

3. Academic & Administrative Staff 50

3.1. Faculty Members 51

3.2. Academic Staff 62

3.3. List of PhD Scholars 64

3.4. Administrative Staff and Other Staff 69

3.5. Institutional Welfare Support 75

4. Committee 80

4.1. Finance Committee 80

4.2. Academic Council 81

4.3. AC-SAC (Academic Council – Students' Affairs Committee) 82

4.4. AC-LAC (Academic Council – Library Advisory Committee) 83

4.5. Board of Studies (BoS) 83

4.6. Quality Assurance Committees 87

4.7. AC – HMC (Academic Council – Hostel Management Committee) 90

4.8. Ethics Committee 90

4.9. PCC (Purchase and Condemnation Committee) 91

4.10. Sub-Committees of Academic Council 91

4.11. Disciplinary Committees 93

4.12. Minority Cell 94

4.13. CPIO-AA-CVO RTI 94

4.14. CPIO-AA-CVO RTI 94

4.15. International Student Relations Office 94

5. Research Projects 95

5.1. MoUs & Research Collaborations 95

5.2. External Funding 97

5.3. LUSIP Project 98

6. Alumni Cell 101

7. Student Activities 109

7.1. Literary Society 109

7.2. Student Activity Centre 110

7.3. Media Cell 111

8. Placements And Internships 114

9. Central Facilities 127

9.1. LUCS 127

9.2. Central Library 129

9.3. Mess 131

9.4. Shopping Complex 131

9.5. Transportation Services 132

9.6. Medical Unit 132

10. Campus Infrastructure 133

10.1. Housing Facilities 133

10.2. Academic Area 134

10.3. Guest House 137

10.4. ATM 138

11. Multi-Disciplinary Centres for Research and Development 138

11.1. Centre for Next Generation Communication and Networking (C-NGCN) 138

11.2. Centre for Machine Learning and Big Data Analytics (CML-BDA) 142

11.3. Centre for Energy and Environmental Studies: (CEES) 142

11.4. Centre for Cryptography, Cyber Security and Digital Forensics (C3-SDF) 149

11.5. LNMIIT Centre for Smart Technologies (L-CST) 150

11.6. LNMIIT Centre for Robotics and Artificial Intelligence (L-CRAI) 151

11.7. Centre for Educational Technology & Teaching Learning Innovation (CET-TLI) 154

11.8. Centre for Material Science and Nano Electronics (C-MSNE) 155

11.9. Centre for Mathematical & Financial Computing (C-MFC) 155

11.10. The LNMIIT Centre for Technology-Business Incubation & Entrepreneurial Leadership (L-CTBI & EL)

156

11.11. LNMIIT Unified Computing Services Centre (LUCS) 156

11.12. Centre for Executive Development Programmes (CEP) 156

11.13. The LNMIIT Centre for Wellness and Positive Health (L-CWPH 157

11.14. Centre for Advanced Software and Skills Development (CASSD) 157

11.15. Centre for Study and Use of Authentic Examination (L-CSUAE) 157

11.16. Centre for Communication, Soft-Skills and Personality Development (C-CSPD) 157

11.17. Centre for Media Relations and Studies (CMRS) 158

12. Notable Achievements 159

12.1. Notable achievements of students (UG/PG/PhD) in respective departments during 2020-21

159

12.2. Publications during 2020-21 161

12.3. Expert Talks by Faculty Members at LNMIIT/Other Institutes/Organizations 174

12.4. FDPs Attended by LNMIIT Faculty Members 176

12.5. Administrative Development Programme 183

12.6. Invited Talks 183

12.7. Conferences/Workshops/Seminars organized at LNMIIT 184

12.8. Paper Reviewers in International and National Journals/Conferences 186

13. Institute Publications 192

14. Photographs 196

1. INTRODUCTION1.1 About the Institute

The LNMIIT was founded in 2002 as a joint venture between Govt. of Rajasthan and Lakshmi & Usha Mittal(LUM) Foundation as a philanthropic initiative. With the emphasis on quality and rigour in education, theInstitute began its first academic session in July 2003 and was granted Deemed-to-be-University status byUGC in 2006 under the De Novo category. The Institute, in spite of being young, is considered as one of thebest institutions in its chosen areas of higher learning , both in the state and the country. In addition tohaving been accredited by the National Assessment & Accreditation Council (NAAC) as an 'A' gradeinstitution, all the engineering programmes of the institute are approved by the AICTE. The 100-acre greenresidential campus is located in a serene atmosphere on the outskirts of India's pink city, Jaipur. Till now,more than 3000 students have graduated from the undergraduate (B.Tech., B.Tech. - M. Tech. (5 YearIntegrated Dual Degree) programmes and nearly 150 students from the postgraduate (M.Tech., M.S. byResearch, M.Sc.) and 20* students have been awarded Ph.D. degree. Currently, the Institute has 2075undergraduate students; 43 postgraduate and 79 Ph.D. candidates. Girls constitute more than 16% of thetotal strength.

The Institute is guided, in broad terms, by its Governing Council (GC) which is headed by its FoundingChairman, Padma Vibhushan Mr. L. N. Mittal , who is also the Executive Chairman of ArcelorMittal, one of thelargest multinational steel and mining companies, apart from having his interests in the petrochemical andenergy sector through HMEL, a joint enterprise of HPCLand Mittal Energy Ltd.

Vision● To establish a world-class platform for creation of knowledge through quality research and its

dissemination through technologically enabled teaching-learning pedagogy in the field of science,technology, engineering, arts and management.

● To become a catalyst in the societal and national development, by ensuring continuous interactionwith industry and other academic and research institutions in India and abroad.

Mission● To offer state-of-the-art undergraduate programmes in Information Technology (IT) & Information

Technology Enabled Services (ITES) as well as core disciplines with emphasis on strongfundamentals, while retaining its interdisciplinary edge.

● To establish centers of excellence in emerging areas to provide significant breakthroughs required tosolve real world problems.

● To make the LNMIIT as the most preferred institute for higher education across the country.● To create intellectual property through innovations, quality research publications, and patents.● To instill core values of excellence, integrity, teamwork, professional ethics and environmental

concerns.

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● To foster and nurture leadership and entrepreneurial qualities and lifelong learning amongststudents, research scholars, faculty and staff members of the LNMIIT.

Objectives● To start innovative PG programmes in engineering and technology, basic sciences, and humanities &

social science.● To focus on Ph.D. in all disciplines.● To participate in e-governance and similar projects of the state of Rajasthan.● To enhance participation in various sponsored and competitive, national/international, grant based

projects in the areas of research of the institute.● To participate and contribute in various relevant projects and outreach initiatives of the state of

Rajasthan.● To optimize the use of critical resources by multitasking.● To establish a vibrant and strong alumni network.● To organize regular conferences to enhance networking and brand equity.● To emphasize on knowledge and skill development at all levels.● To build sizable corpus through smart savings, donations from philanthropic organizations, and

alumni contributions towards meeting specific objectives.

Sr. No. Programme Discipline Level Year ofInception

1. Bachelor of Technology (B.Tech.) Communication and ComputerEngineering

UG 2003

Computer Science and Engineering UG 2008

Electronics and CommunicationEngineering

UG 2008

Mechanical Engineering UG 2013

2. Bachelor of Technology - Master ofTechnology (B.Tech. - M.Tech.)(5-Year Integrated Dual Degree)

Computer Science and Engineering UG 2009

Electronics and CommunicationEngineering

UG 2009

3. Master of Technology (M.Tech.) Computer Science and Engineering PG 2008

Electronics and CommunicationEngineering

PG 2008

4. Master of Science (M.S.) byResearch

Computer Science and Engineering PG 2008

Electronics and CommunicationEngineering

PG 2008

Communication and ComputerEngineering

PG 2003

5. Master of Science (M.Sc.) Physics PG 2016

Mathematics PG 2016

6. Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) Computer Science and Engineering PG 2008

Electronics and CommunicationEngineering

PG 2008

Mechanical-MechatronicsEngineering

PG 2014

Physics PG 2008

Mathematics PG 2008

Humanities and Social Sciences PG 2008

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1.2 Best Practices at LNMIIT1. Regular participation in the accreditation process of UG and PG programmes.2. The institute values the merit of the students, and thus, the admission is done purely on the basis of

the merit in JEE exam conducted every year.3. The institute practices internal academic audit to emphasize on the improvement in the quality of

education.4. Performance-based scholarships are awarded every year to the students.5. Design of curriculum to cater to both the research and industrial needs of the students.6. The curriculum is revised at regular intervals through a structured academic audit process.7. The Choice-Based Credit System (CBCS) gives flexibility to the students for accelerated completion,

provision for an academic pause in cases like entrepreneurial ventures, verified medical conditions,and other such cases.

8. The institute provides research-oriented learning opportunities that indicate the presence of aneco-system that supports interdisciplinary learning and research.

9. The students are given an opportunity to pursue their final year project under any department toimprove the domain-oriented skills.

10. Ample opportunities to organize events, submit research papers in national and internationalconferences, and submission of research projects and consultancy assignments.

11. Seed grants to faculty members to encourage research culture.12. All the students in the campus have been covered under the Mediclaim policy.13. Execution of projects to serve the society on the major scale.14. The institute practices the green campus system and encourages its faculty members and students to

work on implementing the same through their learning and research.

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1.3 Services during COVID-19 PandemicLNMIIT has taken proactive and timely actions to ensure the safety of faculty, students, and staff during theuncertain time of the pandemic. A team from LNMIIT (Dr. Mohit Makkar, Dr. Chand Singh Panwar, and VikasBajpai) developed a disinfectant tunnel, 3-D printed Face Shields, 3-D printed Face Masks, MobileCampus/Building Sanitizer Device, and Low-Cost, Compact Ventilator. LNMIIT has also made significantattempts to promote health and bring awareness to the villages in its vicinity under the initiatives of UnnatBharat Abhiyan (UBA). The UBA faculty coordinator formed a WhatsApp mobile group to disseminate thecovid related information. A disinfectant tunnel in the Rupa-ki-Nagal village by the LNMIIT team – Mr. VikasBajpai, Dr. Mohit Makkar, and Dr. Anu Malik (UBA faculty coordinator). The details of these initiatives arementioned below.

Disinfectant Hut/ChamberA disinfected chamber has been built by a team of LNMIIT. It is installed and tested in a Security Guard’schamber. The significant attribute of the product is that it forms pure mist, unlike other similar inventions,which are sprays and ends up in wet clothes.

3-D printed Face ShieldsA 3-D face shield has been built by a team of LNMIIT, which is coded and printed in LNMIIT’s lab. The criticalattribute of the product is that the 3d design plastic has such hooks which allow easy and robust installation, awider sheet can be used to cover ears as well if required. The distance of the sheet from the face has beentaken care of in the width of the frame and has been kept optimum.

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3-D printed Face MasksA 3-D printed face mask has been built by a team of LNMIIT, which is coded and printed in LNMIIT’s lab. Itrequires a good quality rubber band, plastic lining for a soft touch on the skin, and a filter. The significantfeatures of this product are a plastic lining feature that has made this product usable for a long time.State-of-the-art design allows us to use smaller filters and still be equally effective.

Mobile Campus/Building Sanitiser DeviceA building sanitizer has been built by a team of LNMIIT, which is coded and printed in LNMIIT’s lab. Producthas the mentioned key features - quantity of water and sanitizing chemicals can be varied online and offline.Pressure can be adjusted based on the type of equipment to sanitize. Portable and precise. Small nozzle designcan be used for small equipment and difficult-to-reach places.

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Low-Cost, Compact VentilatorA team in LNMIIT prepares a low-cost compact ventilator. The controls were made for three conditions,normal, traumatic, and acute. All three states require different pressure to be applied for oxygen inhalation.The product can be improved and fully automatized by self-adjusting mode, temperature sensing, andautomatic oxygen flow control.

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Establishing a disinfectant hut/tunnel under the initiatives of Unnat Bharat AbhiyanTo contain the virus up to some extent in its vicinity, LNMIIT established a disinfectant hut in villageRupa-ki-Nagal. This project aims to make villagers aware of COVID19 and its adverse health effects, train thevillagers about hand sanitization and health and hygiene, and train them to use and operate the tunnel/hut. Asensor-based contactless tunnel for self-sanitization of villagers is established in the village. The tunnel hastwo sensors (one at the entrance and the other at the exit), one activates the tunnel when a person enters, andit has five nozzles (two each on the right and left side and one on top). The nozzles spray sanitizer, which helpssanitize the villagers without getting into physical contact with any exposed material or surface. The secondsensor is installed at the exit end, which stops the spraying process. The reason for adding a second sensor isto avoid disinfectant wastage, which helps prevent the spray without any physical contact once again. Thetunnel is made of light aluminum material with pipe wirings inside. The spray machine has a refillabletwenty-liter tank to fill the sanitizer and disinfect around nine hundred people in one filling. To make thesanitizing hut operational even in case of power cuts, we have created this spray machine to operate using achargeable battery that can work for nearly eight hours. The tunnel is established with the financial supportprovided by Unnat Bharat Abhiyan. LNMIIT played a role in establishing the tunnel and training the villagersregarding the functioning of the tunnel, its maintenance, and usage.

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Awareness Activity for Covid19 in Nearby VillagesIn March 2020, during the early onset of COVID19. A WhatsApp group was formed to disseminate COVID19related information. Sarpanch and other prominent members in the village were members of this WhatsAppgroup. This WhatsApp group has been used for different awareness activities since March 2020.

1.4 Campus LocationThe institute is located at Jaipur and operates from its campus, about 10 km from the Jaipur-Agra highway.The campus is at 11 km distance from Transport Nagar in Jaipur city and is very well connected by rail androad links to Agra (240 km), New Delhi (280 km), Ajmer (150 km), Chittorgarh (300 km), and Bikaner (335km) cities. Additionally, the institute is well connected by rail, road, and air with New Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai,and Kolkata. The institute is approximately 16 km away from Jaipur Railway Station, 25 km from the JaipurAirport (JAI), and 15 km from the bus stand. Jaipur is the capital and the largest city of the Indian state ofRajasthan. It is considered a city with historical importance. It is well known as the ‘Pink City of India’, famousfor its UNESCO world heritage sites such as Amber Fort, Nahargarh Fort, and Jantar Mantar.For more information, visit https://www.lnmiit.ac.in/HowToReach.html

1.5 Strategic Plan (2020-2035)The LNMIIT aspires to create a niche for itself in both Indian and global arenas by adopting amulti-disciplinary approach with a focus on contemporarily relevant as well as emerging areas of research,development, teaching learning, entrepreneurship, outreach and collaboration. It aspires to do so whilemaintaining an ecosystem that would ensure work-life balance of its people (faculty & staff) and enablewell-rounded personality development of its students.

This shall be achieved with the help of a sustainable strategic plan involving long-term, medium-term andshort-term milestones, glimpses of which have been highlighted below.

The approach taken in the following strategic plan involves four phases involving two cycles of ‘consolidation& expansion, in order to ensure quality assurance alongside sustainable growth.

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2020-2021 a. Benchmarking of both curricular structure as well as that of the content ofcurriculum with its major peers in the country and around the world, with a viewto ensure its academic rigor, timeliness, relevance and flexibility.

b. Introducing new specializations, courses and programmes (at various levels) forkeeping pace with scientific, technological, societal and other developments andneeds.

c. Improving quality and quantity of research output and focus of research in nicheareas (interdisciplinary) through creation of specialized laboratories and centers.

d. Enabling support system to encourage creation of Intellectual Properties (IP) invarious forms including those of filing patents etc.

e. Introducing select short-term certification and executive development programmesdepending upon the need of the state/nation and market demands.

f. Improving upon the current student-faculty ratio to 1:16 or better by concertedfaculty recruitment and appropriate retention initiatives.

g. Consolidating internationalization efforts in terms of attracting more overseasstudents and international faculty.

h. Creating new academic positions like Research Professor, Professor ofEminence/Emeritus Professor and Adjunct Professor in order to bring in greatervalue to the stakeholders (students, faculty, recruiters) and improve their quality ofexperience.

i. Planning new research & academic collaborations and exploring the possibility ofoffering twinning/joint degree programmes with reputed Indian and foreignuniversities.

j. Establishing a facility for incubating technology-driven businesses and creating anentrepreneurship development ecosystem through creation of a specialized centre.Idea includes providing an adequate support system and an ambient environmentfor encouraging budding student/faculty/staff entrepreneurs and assisting them,where required, by helping incubate companies in the start-up stage.

k. Enhancing the quality of placements by attracting more number of reputed firmsincluding MNCs with an objective of providing greater choice to students as well asenabling higher median salary.

l. Improving upon the institutional brand-image through relevant professionalapproach without overly advertising ourselves.

m. Facilitating visits by select distinguished internationalfaculty/researchers/industry experts/thought leaders on short-term engagement,in order to enable increased research and academic collaborations with foreignuniversities/research laboratories/industries.

n. Creating strategies and mechanisms for recruiting a few international faculty with aview to improve faculty diversity, bring in increased international perspectives andbuild a strong faculty profile.

o. Establishing a Technology Research, Innovation, Development andEntrepreneurship Development Park (TRID-ED Park), preferably with the State /Centre Government (and select Industries), in the adjacent 60-acre land that maybe requested to be transferred to/acquired by the LNMIIT at its mother campus atJaipur.

p. Setting up a ‘Centre for Design, Development & Research (CDDR)’ in the campuspossibly with external involvement and joint collaboration between two or moreagencies.

q. Creating required infrastructure and ensuring that in keeping with the plannedstudent strength and corresponding requirements, corresponding infrastructuralexpansion is undertaken to cater to students, faculty, and staff.

r. Improving upon sports and medical-support facilities on campus.s. Preparing for and participating in various national and international ranking

exercises.

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In a nutshell, during this period, the plan is to focus on consolidation, growth andenrichment of the offerings in the current campus.

2022-2025 a. Enhancing the international character of the institute by bringing in moreinternational faculty & students, with a view to bring in an improved world-view aswell as consolidate its position in terms of internationalization, faculty and studentdiversity. All these factors become significant for higher international ranks butassume importance with respect to creating a global outlook on top of a strongnational standing.

b. Increasing focus on innovation, nationally relevant problems and outreachalongside strengthening research and teaching.

c. Encouraging design-thinking approach to problem solving, product developmentand technology transfer activities in view of possible commercial value of theresearch and development work done in the institute; and where possible, doing sothrough incubating faculty-student co-partnered start-ups.

d. Expanding and consolidating applied research, technology business incubation andentrepreneurial leadership development activities.

e. Applying for 2nd cycle of accreditation by NAAC.f. Ensuring accreditation of all Engineering Programmes by NBA.g. Strengthening national and international ranking of the institute.h. Exploring the possibility of creation of a new Development and Expansion Fund

(DEF).

In brief, objectives in this phase would include bringing in greater innovation, academicand financial consolidation.

2026-2030 a. Consolidating facilities at existing campus.b. Identifying new areas of growth relevant to nation and industries (both local and

global).c. Strengthening and expanding activities of Center for Technology Business

Incubation and Entrepreneurial Leadership (CTBIEL) in the existing campus andcreating new industry and business school linkages.

d. Extending its societal outreach initiatives to new areas of service.e. Initiating exploration and planning for the next phase of growth in terms of setting

up new centres/departments at the existing campus.f. Enhancing the international character of the institute by bringing in more

international faculty & students, with a view to bring in an improved world-view aswell as consolidate its position in terms of internationalization, faculty and studentdiversity.

g. Establishing new research & academic collaborations and exploring the possibilityof offering twinning/joint degree programmes with reputed Indian and foreignuniversities.

h. Creating a new campus in India or abroad (with due diligence and appropriatefinancial model in place, after obtaining any required statutory approvals) in nicheareas.

i. Consolidating incubation and entrepreneurial activities in keeping with the visionof the LNMIIT.

j. Increasing focus on innovation, nationally relevant problems and outreachalongside strengthening research and teaching.

k. Strengthening national and international ranking of the institute.l. Consolidating the institute’s Development and Expansion Fund (DEF).

In summary, the objective in this phase would be to try to bring in greater innovation andscale amongst top 200 universities in the world.

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2030-2035 a. Creating the 3rd campus of the institute in select areas of relevance and in keepingwith the diversity that an Institution of higher learning needs to offer over a periodof time.

b. Identifying areas requiring more emphasis in research, development andentrepreneurship and establishing appropriate research laboratories, programmesand support structure to enable this.

c. Enhancing the contribution of the institute to the society through participation inGovernmental and Non-governmental initiatives of social relevance requiringtechnology-based solutions.

d. Reviewing and possibly re-organizing/re-structuring the institute arounddomain-specific schools and centers of research and development.

e. Creating new initiatives of relevance to the then contemporary and emerging needsof local or global kind.

f. Consolidating all campuses and initiating the next phase of expansion/growth.g. Establishing new research & academic collaborations and exploring the possibility

of offering twinning/joint degree programmes with reputed Indian and foreignuniversities.

h. Encouraging design-thinking approach to problem solving, product developmentand technology transfer activities in view of possible commercial value of theresearch and development work done in the institute; and where possible, doing sothrough incubating faculty student co-partnered start-ups.

i. Strengthening national and international ranking of the institute.

Objectives in this phase would be to arrive at a respectable level nationally and making aquantum jump internationally by building upon significant progress made during thevarious phases preceding it and being ranked by the NIRF among the top institutions ofhigher learning in the country and ranked by the QS/THE amongst the top universities inthe world.

[Proposed Academic Building]

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1.6 AdministrationGoverning Council

ChairmanPadma Vibhushan Shri Lakshmi Niwas Mittal

Chairman & CEO, ArcelorMittal

Mr. Prabh Das (Ex-IAS)Member(LUM Foundation)MD & CEO - HMEL

Mr. Niranjan Kumar Arya, IASMember (Ex-Officio)

Chief SecretaryGovernment of Rajasthan

Mr. Rajan TandonMember(LUM Foundation),Vice President (Finance)Mittal Investment U. K. Limited

Mr. Akhil Arora, IASMember (Ex-Officio)

Principal SecretaryDepartment of Finance

Government of Rajasthan

Mr. V. KrishnanMemberTalent Development Specialist &Performance Consultant (FormerHead-Learning Shared Services, HCLTechnologies Limited)

Mr. Akhil Arora, IASMember (Ex-Officio)

Principal SecretaryDepartment of Finance

Government of Rajasthan

Prof. Arjun DasguptaMember (UGC Nominee)Former ProfessorDepartment of Library &Information University of Calcutta

Prof. Narendra AhujaMember

(Academic Institution)Donald Biggar Willett Professor

Emeritus, University of Illinoisat Urbana-Champaign

Prof. Pankaj JaloteMember(Academic Institution)Distinguished ProfessorIndraprastha Institute ofInformation Technology (IIIT) Delhi

Prof. B. RaviMember

(Academic Institution)Chair Professor

Indian Institute of Technology,Bombay

Prof. J. P. SharmaMember(Academic Institution)Former Vice Chancellor of GBU,Greater Noida

Dr. Narendra KumarMember (Ex-Officio)

Dean of Academic Affairs(In charge)

The LNMIIT, Jaipur

Prof. Rahul BanerjeeMember Secretary (Ex-officio)

Director, The LNMIIT, Jaipur

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Deans, Heads of the Departments & Key Persons

Deans

Dr. Narendra KumarDean of Academic Affairs

(In-charge)

Prof. Mohan. K. KadalbajooDean of Faculty Affairs

Dr. Subrat K. DasAssociate Dean of Admission &

Placement

Prof. G. D. SharmaDean of Sponsored Research &

Consultancy

Dr. Nikhil SharmaAssistant Dean of Academic

Affairs

Dr. Sandeep SainiAssistant Dean of Academic

Affairs

Prof. Somnath BiswasDean of Academic Research

Prof. Anupam SinghDean of Student Affairs

Dr. Sunil KumarAssistant Dean of Admission &

Placement

Mr. Vikas BajpaiAssistant Dean, Alumni Affairs

& Resource Generation

Prof. Manju DhariwalDean of Alumni Affairs &

Resource Generation, Dean ofInternational Students’

Relations

Heads of the Departments

Dr. Preety SinghComputer Science &

Engineering

Prof. Raghuvir Singh TomarElectronics & Communication

Engineering

Dr. Ashok Kumar DargarMechanical-Mechatronics

Engineering

Dr. Subhayan BiswasPhysics

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Dr. Pratibha GargMathematics

Dr. Usha KanoongoHumanities & Social Sciences

Conveners, Admissions

Dr. Sunil KumarUG Admission 2021

[email protected]

Dr. Joyeeta SinghaPG Admission (Engg.) 2021

[email protected]

Dr. Nabyendu DasPG Admission (Science) [email protected]

Dr. Vikram SharmaPhD Admission 2021

[email protected]

Hostel Leadership

Prof. Ajit PatelChief Warden

Dr. Vikas GuptaAssociate Chief Warden

Administration

Dr. Renu BapnaRegistrar

Mr. Ashok Kumar SalechaFinance Officer

Mr. Manuj SharmaTraining and Placement

Officer

Mr. Giridhar M KunkarLibrarian

2. ACADEMIC PROGRAMMESThe institute offers B.Tech., B.Tech. - M.Tech. integrated dual degree, M.Tech., M.S (by Research), M.Sc., and PhDprogrammes in different branches of Engineering and Technology and Science disciplines. The details aboutthese programmes are mentioned below.

Sr. No. Programme Discipline

1 Bachelor of Technology (B.Tech.) Communication and Computer Engineering(CCE)

Computer Science and Engineering (CSE)

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Electronics and Communication Engineering(ECE)

Mechanical Engineering (ME)

2 B. Tech. (Hons.) CSE with Specialization in Artificial Intelligence &Data Science

CCE with Specialization in Artificial Intelligence &Data Science

ME with Specialization in Robotics & Automation

3 Minors Artificial Intelligence & Data Science (For B.Tech.ECE & ME Students)

Robotics & Automation (For B.Tech. CCE, CSE &ECE Students)

4 Bachelor of Technology - Master ofTechnology (B.Tech. - M.Tech.)(5-Year Integrated Dual Degree)

Computer Science and Engineering (CSE)

Electronics and Communication Engineering(ECE)

5 Master of Technology (M.Tech.) Computer Science and Engineering (CSE)

Electronics and Communication Engineering(ECE)

6 Master of Science (M.S.) by Research Computer Science and Engineering (CSE)

Electronics and Communication Engineering(ECE)

Communication and Computer Engineering(CCE)

7 Master of Science (M.Sc.) Physics (PHY)

Mathematics (MTH)

8 Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) Computer Science and Engineering (CSE)

Electronics and Communication Engineering(ECE)

Mechanical-Mechatronics Engineering (MME)

Physics (PHY)

Mathematics (MTH)

Humanities and Social Sciences (HSS)

2.1. Undergraduate ProgrammesThe institute offers four Years B.Tech. programme in the following branches of Engineering and Technology:

● Communication and Computer Engineering (CCE)● Computer Science and Engineering (CSE)● Electronics and Communication Engineering (ECE)● Mechanical Engineering (ME)

The institute offers five years B.Tech. – M.Tech. integrated dual degree programme in the following branchesof Engineering and Technology:

● Computer Science and Engineering (CSE)

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● Electronics and Communication Engineering (ECE)

Additionally, the institute has started B.Tech. (Hons.) and minors programmes in the followingspecializations:

● B.Tech. (Hons.) in CSE with specialization in Artificial Intelligence & Data Science● B.Tech. (Hons.) in CCE with specialization in Artificial Intelligence & Data Science● B.Tech. (Hons.) in ME with specialization in Robotics & Automation● Minor in Artificial Intelligence & Data Science● Minor in Robotics & Automation

Computer Science and EngineeringThe Department of Computer Science and Engineering was established in 2008. The Department is ablysupported by a team of faculty members having degrees from reputed institutes and excellent researchcredentials.

The Department currently offers the following Undergraduate Programmes:● B. Tech. in Computer Science and Engineering● B. Tech. (Honours) in Computer Science and Engineering with specialization in Artificial Intelligence

& Data Science● B.Tech. – M.Tech. Integrated Dual Degree in Computer Science and Engineering● Minor in Artificial Intelligence & Data Science for B.Tech (ECE/ ME)

The strength of each of its programmes lies in its progressive curriculum that offers flexibility to students tocarefully select a set of program/other electives to earn specialized knowledge in areas of their choice. Weemphasize on hands-on based learning to bridge the gap between academia and industry. Projects areencouraged to deal with real-world problems using emerging technologies. To enhance student learning, theDepartment regularly organizes workshops and lectures by experts from renowned institutions andorganizations.

Electronics and Communication EngineeringThe Department currently offers following Undergraduate Programmes:

● B.Tech. in Electronics and Communication Engineering● B.Tech. in Communication and Computer Engineering● B.Tech. - M.Tech. Dual degree (5 years) in Electronics and Communication Engineering

The curriculum of each Programme consists of a mixture of well thought out courses in the following broadcategories: Language, Mathematics, Science, Engineering Science, Humanities/Social Sciences/Management,Professional Courses, Elective Courses, Laboratory Courses, Project Courses. A semester-wise structure of thecurriculum for each Programme, currently being followed, is given in below. However, the semester-wisestructure is not followed rigidly. In fact, the students are encouraged to change the structure of theircurriculum, to the extent feasible and desirable, to accommodate their own aspirations. The curriculum ofevery academic Programme is reviewed, periodically, with a view to incorporate the latest advancespertaining to the Programme.

Mechanical-Mechatronics EngineeringThe Department of Mechanical-Mechatronics Engineering was established in 2013. The Department is ablysupported by a team of faculty members having degrees from reputed institutes and excellent researchcredentials. The Department currently offers the following Undergraduate Programmes:

● B. Tech. in Mechanical Engineering● B. Tech. (Honours) in Mechanical Engineering with specialization in Robotics and Automation● Minor in Robotics and Automation for B.Tech. (ECE/CSE and CCE)

The strength of each of its programmes lies in its progressive curriculum that offers flexibility to students tocarefully select a set of program/other electives to earn specialized knowledge in areas of their choice. Weemphasize on hands-on based learning to bridge the gap between academia and industry. Projects areencouraged to deal with real-world problems using emerging technologies. To enhance student learning, theDepartment regularly organizes workshops and lectures by experts from renowned institutions andorganizations.

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2.2. Post Graduate ProgrammesThe institute offers two years M.Tech. programme in the following branches of Engineering and Technology:

● Computer Science and Engineering (CSE)● Electronics and Communication Engineering (ECE)

The institute offers two years M.S. (by Research) programme in the following branches of Engineering andTechnology:

● Computer Science and Engineering (CSE)● Electronics and Communication Engineering (ECE)● Communication and Computer Engineering (CCE)

The institute offers two years M.Sc. programme in the following disciplines:● Mathematics (MTH)● Physics (PHY)

Computer Science and EngineeringThe Department currently offers the following Postgraduate Programmes:

● M. Tech. in CSE● M.S (Research) in CSE

The research work is carried out in the following fields (including but not limited to):● Artificial Intelligence: Intelligent Systems, Wearable computing● Computational Sciences: Computational Geometry, Computational Neuroscience and Modeling &

Simulation● Computer Security: Cyber Security, Cryptology, Digital Forensics● Data Science: Data Mining, Machine Learning, Pattern Recognition, Social Media Analytics● Image/Signal Processing and Computer Vision: Medical image/signal processing, Bio-metrics, Image

Retrieval, Deep Learning, Video Analytics, Remote sensing, Document analysis● Networks: Ad-Hoc Networks, Cloud Computing, Distributed Computing, IoT/CPS, Computer and

Network Security, Software Defined Networking● Software Engineering: Model Based Software Engineering, Software Testing

Electronics and Communication EngineeringThe Department currently offers the following Postgraduate Programmes:

● M. Tech. in ECE● M.S (Research) in ECE● M.S (Research) in CCE

The research work is carried out in the following fields (including but not limited to): Communication andSignal Processing, Optical Communication, RF and Microwave, VLSI Design and Embedded Systems, WirelessCommunication, Cognitive Radio, Sensor networks, Distributed systems etc.

MathematicsThe department offers two-year M.Sc. programme which is motivated and based on the suggestions from theGovt. of India for the Development of Higher Mathematics for Applications, as a part of the 12th FYP of theplanning commission. Mathematics is driven by the need for abstract and quantitative modeling andprediction in engineering and the sciences. New disciplines have emerged by employing sophisticatedMathematical models and are continuously joining established areas that use mathematical formalism inmodeling and prediction. Nowadays many industries employ mathematical models and techniques in theirresearch and product development. Judicious development and use of Mathematical models in industry andthe sciences requires education of Mathematicians who are able to bring to bear mathematical methods andinteract with experts in application areas outside of mathematics.

The Master's degree in Mathematics has a goal to respond to the above need. With this objective in mind, weare running successfully M.Sc. Mathematics Programme since 2016-2017. The M.Sc. Programme inMathematics is of two years duration comprising four semesters. The Programme is designed to offer acomplete, balanced combination of courses in Mathematics (including both theory and applications). Thedepartment has wider scope to offer variety of courses including but not limited to Mathematical Modelling,Scientific Computing, Fluid Dynamics, Numerical Techniques, Cryptography, Stochastic Control, Graph Theory,Fractal Geometry, Computational Topology/Geometry etc.

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PhysicsIn today’s multidisciplinary world of activities, engineering or technology cannot flourish without theknowledge of advanced Physics. All branches of science and engineering are somehow or other related toPhysics. To unravel the mysteries of Physics, one would require a certain amount of high-quality educationand training. The department offers two-year M.Sc. programme. The Master's Programme in Physics, with aduration of 2 years, provides students the fundamental knowledge of advanced physics, along withproblem-solving skills, and most importantly a thirst for acquiring further knowledge. After completion ofsuch a programme, students typically choose careers in science or engineering research, academic jobs,careers in information technology, or entrepreneurship.

2.3. Doctoral ProgrammeFull time Doctorate programmes are offered in the following departments:

● Computer Science and Engineering● Electronics and Communication Engineering● Mechanical-Mechatronics Engineering● Mathematics● Physics● Humanities and Social Sciences

Computer Science and EngineeringThe Department offers the PhD programme with research work being carried out in the following fields(including but not limited to):

● Artificial Intelligence: Intelligent Systems, Wearable computing● Computational Sciences: Computational Geometry, Computational Neuroscience and Modeling &

Simulation● Computer Security: Cyber Security, Cryptology, Digital Forensics● Data Science: Data Mining, Machine Learning, Pattern Recognition, Social Media Analytics● Image/Signal Processing and Computer Vision: Medical image/signal processing, Bio-metrics, Image

Retrieval● Networks: Ad-Hoc Networks, Cloud Computing, Distributed Computing, IoT/CPS, Computer and

Network Security, Software Defined Networking● Software Engineering: Model Based Software Engineering, Software Testing● Protocol Engineering, ITS

Electronics and Communication EngineeringThe broad research areas in which the PhD programme is offered by the department includes:

● Communication & Signal Processing: Wireless Communication/ Deep Learning assisted WirelessCommunication, Optical Wireless Communication (Free Space Optics, LiFi etc.).

● Speech, Audio, Image and Video processing, Photonics Communication, Control System, NeuralNetwork, and Fuzzy Logic Control.

● Digital System Design using FPGAs, VLSI Implementations using Machine Learning Algorithms,Hardware Security, VLSI Testing, MEMS, Sensors.

● Antenna Design and Wireless Power Transfer for advanced applications, Linearization of RF PowerAmplifiers.

● Ad-hoc Wireless Sensor Networks (WSN), Distributed Estimation and Target Tracking,Communication Protocols in IoT/ WSNs

Mechanical-Mechatronics EngineeringThe broad research areas in which the PhD programme is offered by the department includes:

● Thermal Engineering: Heat Pipes, Nanofluids, IC Engine, Jet Impingements, Water Purifications, Solarthermal energy conversion, Alternative Fuels.

● Design: Vibration, Tribology, Fracture Mechanics, Condition Monitoring. Machine tool design,Experimental solid mechanics, High strain rate deformation, Functionally graded composites.

● Manufacturing Technology: Electro Discharge Machining, Welding, Industrial Metallurgy,Micro-Machining, CNC Machining.

● Industrial Engineering: Supply Chain Management.

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● Mechatronics Engineering, Robotics, System Dynamics and Control, Engineering Design

MathematicsThe Department has a vision to establish a centre for research and teaching excellence in Mathematics ofinternational repute. It has always shared the vision of the Institute in striving for excellence in research andteaching and has succeeded in this endeavor to a large extent. Over the years The Department ofMathematics, LNM Institute of Information Technology is part of the LNMIIT since its inception, thedepartment has evolved as one of the premier departments in the country providing excellent teaching andresearch in Mathematical Sciences and Statistics. The vibrant academic environment is nurtured by stronglymotivated faculty and provides an opportunity to pursue research in frontline areas of basic as well asinterdisciplinary areas of science and technology. The Department currently has 7 faculty members who areengaged in research and teaching in various areas of Pure Mathematics, Applied Mathematics, Statistics andTheoretical Computer Science. The faculty members of the Department aim to achieve high quality researchand teaching standards in various disciplines of Mathematics with a flavor of unified approach towards bothpure and applied aspects and are ever responsive towards the growing demands of new and emerging areasof research and teaching. As Mathematics has penetrated into many areas of human endeavors, an updating ofthe curricula is regularly undertaken to keep abreast with the latest developments and to bring innovations.

PhysicsThe department has Ph. D. Programme both in experimental as well as theoretical physics. Students in thisProgramme are trained through rigorous course work covering basic as well as advanced level courses beforestarting their research work. The major research areas in the department are Cosmology, High EnergyPhysics, Material Science, Photovoltaic, Solar Cell, Biosensors and Nanotechnology, Theoretical andcomputational Biophysics, General relativity, Black holes, Quantum Gravity and Theoretical Condensed MatterPhysics.

Humanities and Social SciencesHumanities and Social Sciences is one of the academic departments of LNMIIT Jaipur. It is multi-disciplinaryin nature, and currently consists of three disciplines: English, Economics and Psychology. The Departmentoffers undergraduate courses to engineering students as well as offers Ph.D. Programme in English,Economics, Psychology and related interdisciplinary areas.

2.4. Development of Curriculum/Curriculum ReformsThe institute has developed a flexible, largely modular and modern curriculum structure for all itsprogrammes. Several relevant recommendations of learned bodies like ACM, IEEE, and ASME as well as themodel curriculum from AICTE, apart from several relevant recommendations by the UGC and the NewEducation Policy have been kept in the view in the process of creation of the associated teaching-learningframework that goes with this curricular structure. The institute has also benchmarked its curriculum withsome of the best institutions in the country and abroad. This exercise has been already completed for few ofthe programmes, whereas for the remaining programmes such an exercise is in pipeline. The LNMIIT hasdecided to undertake periodic audit of its programmes that would involve external experts from academiaand industry along with the internal faculty. These practices, in a broader sense, incorporate theLearning-Outcome based Curriculum Framework (LOCF) of the UGC. Some of the unique features andimportant elements include curriculum design and development process, introduction of honors and minors’degrees at undergraduate levels, facilitation of online courses, choice-based credit system, internship policy,and research-oriented learning. Additionally, a well devised mechanism of comprehensive examinations forPhD research scholars has been practiced to test their fundamental knowledge in their proposed researchareas after essential credit courses. The scholars have to qualify the exam which consists of both theory andviva-voce components. This mechanism has been proven to be a key performance indicator in improving thequality of doctoral research.In an attempt to create a competitive environment among the students with respect to the dynamicallychanging research and industrial needs, two new specializations are introduced at the undergraduate leveland a new specialization is introduced at the postgraduate level, as discussed below.

A. B. Tech. (Honours) in Computer Science and Engineering with specialization in ArtificialIntelligence & Data Science

Students of Computer Science & Engineering (CSE) and Communications & Computer Engineering (CCE) aregiven an option of a B. Tech. Honours degree with Specialization in Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Data

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Science (DS), provided they study a specific stream of courses related to these domains. The Honours degreewith specialization program in Artificial Intelligence and Data Science is designed to provide the neededboost and broad exposure to advanced concepts, latest tools, and involved analytical methods in thefascinating world of AI and DS. It will enable the students CSE and CCE streams to acquire additional keyskills and expertise beyond the knowledge gained in B. Tech. curriculum, to best meet their assured jobprospects and career goals through these professionally oriented, industrially aligned courses and above allthe application-focused hands-on approach to learning.

ObjectivesThe objectives of the specialization are as follows:

● To provide state-of-art expertise in advanced Artificial Intelligence and Data Science concepts,algorithms, tools and their applications.

● To enable capability to analyze, design and implement appropriate solutions for real world business,social and scientific problems requiring Artificial Intelligence and Data Science techniques.

● To enhance employability in research labs and industry, requiring knowledge and skills in ArtificialIntelligence and Data Science.

Learning OutcomesOn completion of this specialization, the students will have the ability to:

● Formalize and model data-intensive problems in Artificial Intelligence and Data Science in terms ofthe underlying statistical and computational principles.

● Assess suitability and implement different Artificial Intelligence and machine learning methods forsolving a new problem.

● Design solutions using relevant Artificial Intelligence and Data Science techniques to solve real-worldproblems.

● Apply appropriate concepts, design principles and frameworks to develop Artificial Intelligence- DataScience based prototypes while ensuring the integrity and ethics of the domain.

Course Structure

Sr.No.

Semester Credits (L-T-P-C)

1 Multiagent Systems 5th 3-0-0-3

2 Data Science Lab 5th 0-0-2-1

3 Artificial Intelligence Lab 5th 0-0-2-1

4 Machine Learning 6th 3-0-0-3

5 Machine Learning Lab 6th 0-0-2-1

6 Specialization Elective 1 6th 3-0-0-3

7 Introduction to Big Data 7th 2-0-2-3

8 Specialization Elective 2 7th 3-0-0-3

9 Ethics in Artificial Intelligence and Data Science 8th 1-0-0-1

Total credits 19

Further to the mandatory specialization courses, students are free to choose courses which interest themfrom the Specialization Elective-cluster. Tentative list of courses in Specialization Elective Cluster are DeepLearning, Knowledge Representation, Reasoning & Applications, Computer Vision & Applications, MiningMassive Datasets, Reinforcement Learning, Natural Language Processing, Human-Computer Interaction,Information Visualization, Sequential Pattern Mining, Analytics for Internet of Things, Social NetworkAnalysis, Knowledge Graphs, Security and Privacy in Data Science.

The B. Tech. project (existing in 6th and 7th semesters of curriculum and having total of 6 credits assigned toit) will be done as a capstone project. This will be in the domain of AI/DS and will help the student to applythe learning in the Specialization Programme to a practical problem related to any specialization topic.

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Number of seats and eligibility criteriaThe number of seats for Specialization in Artificial Intelligence and Data Science will be limited to 60. Theeligibility criteria will be as follows:

● Minimum 7.0 CGPA (cumulative of 1st, 2nd, and 3rd semester)● Minimum BC grade in the following courses:● Computer Programming● Computer Programming Lab● Data Structures & Algorithms● Data Structures & Algorithms Lab● Discrete Mathematical Structures● Mathematics –II● Mathematics –III

Final merit list will be prepared on basis of CGPA (cumulative of 1st, 2nd and 3rd semester).

Criteria for award of Honours degree with Specialization in Artificial Intelligence & DataScienceUpon successful completion of the additional 19 credits, as mentioned above, the student will be eligible forthe award of:

● B.Tech. Honours in Computer Science and Engineering with Specialization in Artificial Intelligence &Data Science (for CSE students as per academic norms of the Institute).

● B.Tech. Honours in Communication and Computer Engineering with Specialization in ArtificialIntelligence & Data Science (for CCE students as per academic norms of the Institute).

B. Minor in Artificial Intelligence & Data Science for B.Tech (ECE/ME)Keeping in view the Institute’s objective of emphasis on knowledge and skill development at all levels, theDepartment of Computer Science & Engineering (CSE) is offering a ‘Minor in Artificial Intelligence and DataScience’ for students of Electronics & Communication Engineering (ECE) and Mechanical Engineering (ME)disciplines.

Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Data Science (DS) is poised to disrupt our world with intelligent machinesenabling high-level cognitive processes like thinking, perceiving, learning, problem solving and decisionmaking. Coupled with advances in data collection and aggregation, analytics and computer processing power,AI and DS present opportunities to complement and supplement human intelligence and enrich the waypeople live and work.

ObjectivesThe objectives of offering the Minor programme are as follows:

● To promote understanding of concepts, techniques and applications of Artificial Intelligence and DataScience by offering related courses.

● To demonstrate applicability of techniques to real world business, social and scientific problems.● To enhance employability in industry hiring requiring knowledge and skills in Artificial Intelligence

and Data Science.

Learning OutcomesOn completion of this Minor, the students will have the ability to:

● Formalize and model data-intensive problems in Artificial Intelligence and Data Science in terms ofthe underlying statistical and computational principles.

● Assess suitability and implement different Artificial Intelligence and machine learning methods forsolving a new problem.

● Visualize and interpret the results of Artificial Intelligence and machine learning algorithms, assesstheir credibility, and communicate the results.

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● Use various Artificial Intelligence and Data Science tools to solve real-world problems while ensuringthe integrity and ethics of the domain.

CoursesThe extra thesis credits required for the Minor will be through courses mentioned in the structure below:

S.No. Course Semester Credits (L-T-P-C)

0 Probability & Statistics(For ME students ONLY)

Before5th Semester

Audit

0 Discrete Mathematical Structures(Suggested NPTEL course:https://nptel.ac.in/courses/106/106/106106094/)

3rd

Pass/Fail(Institute-conducted exam

in 3rd semester)

0 Design and Analysis of Algorithms(Customized course content will beprovided)

4th

Pass/Fail(Institute-conducted exam

in 4th semester)

1 Introduction to Data Science 5th 3-0-0-3

2 Data Science Lab 5th 0-0-2-1

3 Machine Learning 6th 3-0-0-3

4 Machine Learning Lab 6th 0-0-2-1

5 Artificial Intelligence 7th 3-0-0-3

6 Artificial Intelligence Lab 7th 0-0-2-1

7 Introduction to Big Data 7th 2-0-2-3

8 Capstone project 7th/8th 3-0-0-3

9 Ethics in Artificial Intelligence & DataScience

8th 1-0-0-1

Total credits 19

Additional program electives offered by CSE Department in the area of AI & DS are given below. Students mayalso take these courses as per academic provisions of the Institute.

S.No. CourseType

Semester Credits(L-T-P-C)

Suggested Courses

1. ProgramElective

5th/6th/7th

3-0-0-3 Such as Deep Learning, Computer Vision,Natural Language Processing, InformationRetrieval, Reinforcement Learning, KnowledgeRepresentation, Reasoning & Applications

Number of seats and eligibility criteria

Number of seats for Minor in Artificial Intelligence & Data Science will be limited to 20. The eligibility criteriaare as follows:

● Minimum 7.0 CGPA (cumulative of 1stand 2nd semesters)● Minimum BC grade in the following courses:

○ Computer Programming○ Computer Programming Lab○ Data Structures & Algorithms○ Data Structures & Algorithms Lab○ Mathematics –I and Mathematics –II

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Final merit list will be prepared on basis of CGPA (cumulative of 1st and 2nd semesters).

Award of Minor in Artificial Intelligence & Data ScienceUpon successful completion of the additional 19 credits, as mentioned above, the student will be eligible forthe award of Minor in Artificial Intelligence & Data Science as per academic norms of the Institute.

Approval process of specialization in AI & DS

Sr. No. Event Date Progress made to start the Programme

1. AC-EPC OfficeOrder

3 January 2020 Formation of AC-EPC sub-committee to createa Minor in Artificial Intelligence (AI) and DataScience (DS)

2. First meeting ofAC-EPCsubcommittee

17 January 17,2020

Deliberations on fundamental requirements ofMinor. Proposal for creation of a Specializationfor CSE/CCE students

3. Departmentalmeeting

February 26, 2020 Proposal of a Minor in AI & DS and aSpecialization in AI & DS presented

4. 14th AC-AACmeeting

February 27, 2020 First proposal of a Minor in AI & DS (fornon-CSE/CCE students) and a Specialization inAI & DS (for CSE/CCE students) presented.Recommended to AC for further deliberation.Department also asked to work outrecommendations of AC-AAC and present backto BoS and AC-AAC

5. Departmentalmeeting

February 28, 2020 Recommendations of AC-AAC discussed

6. Circulation to BoSmembers

March 2, 2020 First proposal shared by mail for inputs

7. 59th meeting ofthe AcademicCouncil(Agenda itemsAC-A-59.03.09andAC-A-59.03.10)

March 4, 2020 v1 proposals of Minor in AI&DS andSpecialization in AI & DS presented. ACrecommendations:1. For Minor: Removal of MOOC courses butretaining of Mini Project and preference tohands-on learning. To discuss minimum andmaximum number of students and eligibilitycriteria2. For Specialization: Option to be given toexisting students also. To be discussed inDepartment, BoS, AC-AAC and presented to ACfor further deliberations

8. Departmentalmeeting

March 12, 2020 Minor and Specialization course structuresdiscussed in Department

9. BoS meeting June 16, 2020 Revised proposals presented to BoS. ApprovedMinor and Specialization in principle.Structure to be fine-tuned based onsuggestions from experts. More coursesrelated to AI like Classical AI / KnowledgeRepresentation. Other elective courses couldbe Constraints Satisfaction, ConstraintsProcessing, Ontologies, Logic forMultiagent systems etc. To have Data Sciencecourse from an application perspective for non

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– CSE students. AI & Ethics course should beoffered (possibly 2 credits). A course onDistributed Systems and DistributedComputing is a must. A course on KnowledgeGraphs can be included

10. Departmentalmeeting

June 20, 2020 Recommendations of BoS for Minor andSpecialization structures discussed inDepartment

11. Departmentalmeeting

July 9, 2020 Minor and Specialization structures discussedin Department

12. 19th AC-AACmeeting

July 22, 2020 Revised v2 proposals presented.Recommended to AC for approval

13. 61st meeting ofthe AcademicCouncil(Agenda itemsAC-A-61.03.02andAC-A-61.03.03)

August 29, 2020 v2 proposals presented. AC recommendations:1. For Minor: In principle approval given.Students to be encouraged to go for SLI.Preferably not to be introduced from first yearwhich is a foundation year. Ethics course maybe introduced in early years of introduction.CIFs and course details to be finalized andshared with AC members2. For Specialization: In principle approvalgiven. Curriculum of courses to be well definedto differentiate the curriculum of core andelectives already in this field in the Institute.CIFs and course details to be finalized andshared with AC members

14. 46th GC meeting September 4, 2020 Proposals presented to GC. GCrecommendations:1. For Minor: Approval given. Intake to notnecessarily be limited to 20 unless constrainedby resources. GC informed that it would bescaled as per demand and feasibility2. For Specialization: In-principal agreementgiven. To designate qualified faculty fromexisting pool and to recruit more in designateddomain. To apply to regulatory body forapproval

15. Departmentalmeeting

October 24, 2020 Inputs received from BoS, AC-AAC, ACdiscussed in Department

16. BoS meeting December 18,2020

Revised proposals presented to BoS. Proposalsapproved by BoS

17. 22nd AC-AACmeeting

January 31, 2021 v3 proposals presented. Recommended asreceived. For specialization, 26 credits in 6th

semester recommended to AC for approval18. 63rd meeting of

the AcademicCouncil(Agenda itemsAC-A-63.03.02 andAC-A-63.03.03)

February 20, 2021 Detailed proposals presented. ACrecommended:1. For Minor: Course structure to befine-Detailed proposals presented. ACrecommended:1. For Minor: Course structure to be fine-tunedto give focus to Lab components and needbased restructuring of credits in audit and

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credit courses. Proposal to be discussedinternally and finalised by Chairman AC forimplementation from forthcoming academicsession. The final Course structure to becirculated to AC Members2. For Specialization: Practical component foreach course to be reviewed for adequatehands-on learning. CIFs of all courses to beready in next one month and circulated to ACMembers. Possibility for consultation andcontribution from other departments to beexplored. Electives may be kept in clusters.Researchers from industries may be consultedfor taking teaching assignments. Introductionof Fractional credit system to be explored.Programme to be introduced from nextAcademic year with nomenclature of degree asB. Tech (Hons.) CSE (Specialization in ArtificialIntelligence and Data Science), to give duerecognition to additional credit earned bystudents during the programme

19. Circulation to allDepartments

April 8, 2021 v4 proposal shared with all Department HoDs

20. Departmentalmeeting

April 9 & 13, 2021 Detailed structures discussed in Department

21. Circulation to BoS April 15, 2021 v4.1 proposal shared with BoS22. Recommendation

by AC-AAC ChairApril 15, 2021 v4.1proposals recommended

23. Approval from ACChair

April 15, 2021 v4.1proposals approved

C. B. Tech. (Honours) in Mechanical Engineering with specialization in Robotics andAutomation

The MME department enables this Specialization in collaboration with the LNMIIT Centre for Robotics &Artificial Intelligence (LCRAI), which is multidisciplinary Centre meant for research and development invarious areas of Robotics and Artificial Intelligence. Currently anchored by the Department ofMechanical-Mechatronics Engineering.

It is proposed that students of Mechanical Engineering be given an option of a Specialization in Robotics &Automation, provided they study a specific stream of courses related to this domain. The Specialization inRobotics & Automation will provide the needed boost and broad exposure to advanced concepts, latest tools,and involved analytical methods in the fascinating world of Robotics & Automation. It will enable the studentsof ME stream to acquire additional key skills and expertise beyond the knowledge gained in B. Tech.curriculum. Robotics and Automation Specialization will enable students to gain expertise in next generationrobotics and automated Machines.

ScopeRobotics and Automation is a field of Engineering that involves the conception, design, manufacture, andoperation of robots and automated machines. It is a combination and overlaps many fields of Engineeringincluding Electronics, Computer Science, Artificial Intelligence, Automation, Mechatronics, Nano Technologyand Bio Engineering. Inadequate availability of Robotics & Automation expertise is one of the challenges torealize the full potential growth of the world. There is an emergent need for developing future talent in

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accordance with the changing needs of the job market. The students need to be equipped with the new skillset to be ready for new-age job requirements.

ObjectivesThe objectives of offering the Specialization are as follows:

● To promote understanding of concepts, techniques and applications of Robotics & Automation byoffering related courses.

● To demonstrate applicability of techniques to real world business, social and scientific problems.● To facilitate use of various tools to realize future robotic and automation systems.● To enhance employability in industry hiring requiring knowledge and skills in Robotics & Automation.

Learning OutcomesOn completion of this Specialization, the students will have the ability to:

● Design & Develop the Robotic and Automation systems efficiently with careful selection of material,sensors, controllers and other components.

● Model, Simulate & Control the kinematics and dynamics of Robotic & Automation systems.● Write programs and Algorithms on various programming platforms for Robotic and Automation

systems.● Apply basics of AI, Machine Learning & Image processing for efficient functioning of Robotic and

Automation systems.

SelectionThe eligibility criterion is based on the performance of students in key fundamental courses. Students canapply for the Minor at beginning of 2nd semester.Eligibility criteria:

● Minimum CGPA of 6.0 in First Semester.● Minimum B grade in the following subjects:● Basic Electronics● Computer Programming● Mathematics – I

Award of SpecializationUpon completion of the additional 5 courses (total 19 Credits) along with B.Tech curriculum, the student willbe eligible for the award of Honours degree in Mechanical Engineering with Specialization in Robotics &Automation as per academic norms.For more details, visit: https://www.lnmiit.ac.in/LCRAI/Specialization-in-Robotics-and-Automation.html

Course Structure

Course Semester Credits L-T-P-C

Introduction to Automation 3rd 3-0-2-4

Modeling and Design of Robots 4th 3-0-2-4

Programming for Automation and Robotics 5th 1-0-3-3

Control and Optimisation of Automation and Robotic Systems 6th 3-0-2-4

Artificial Intelligence for Robotics and Automation 7th 3-0-2-4

Total Credits 19

D. Minor in Robotics and Automation for B.Tech. (ECE/CSE and CCE)

The MME department enables this minor in collaboration with the LNMIIT Centre for Robotics & ArtificialIntelligence (LCRAI), which is multidisciplinary Centre meant for research and development in various areasof Robotics and Artificial Intelligence. Currently anchored by the Department of Mechanical-Mechatronics

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Engineering. Minor in Robotics and Automation will enable students to gain expertise in next generationrobotics and automation systems. Minor will exposure to our students to various multidisciplinary coursesfrom different disciplines and preparing them to think about robotics from a holistic approach. This programwill prepare a skilled industry workforce as well as expert researchers who will lead the technology-orientedworld of automated machines and industrial robots. The students will have career opportunities inmanufacturing, research and engineering, agriculture, mining, space exploration, power-plant maintenanceand a variety of other areas.

ScopeRobotics and Automation is a field of Engineering that involves the conception, design, manufacture, andoperation of robots and automated machines. It is a combination and overlaps many fields of Engineeringincluding Electronics, Computer Science, Artificial Intelligence, Automation, Mechatronics, Nano Technologyand Bio Engineering.

ObjectivesThe objectives of offering the Minor programme are as follows:

● To promote understanding of concepts, techniques and applications of Robotics & Automation byoffering related courses.

● To demonstrate applicability of techniques to real world business, social and scientific problems.● To facilitate use of various tools to realize future robotic and automation systems.● To enhance employability in industry hiring requiring knowledge and skills in Robotics & Automation.

Learning OutcomesOn completion of this Minor, the students will have the ability to:

● Design & Develop the Robotic and Automation systems efficiently with careful selection of material,sensors, controllers and other components.

● Model, Simulate & Control the kinematics and dynamics of Robotic & Automation systems.● Write programs and Algorithms on various programming platforms for Robotic and Automation

systems.● Apply basics of AI, Machine Learning & Image processing for efficient functioning of Robotic and

Automation systems.

Total number of SeatsIt is proposed that total number of seats for Minor in Robotics & Automation will be limited to 20.

Selection CriteriaThe eligibility criterion is based on the performance of students in key fundamental courses. Students canapply for the Minor at beginning of 2nd semester.

Eligibility criteria● Minimum CGPA of 6.0 in First Semester.● Minimum B grade in the following subjects:● Basic Electronics● Computer Programming● Mathematics – I

Award of MinorMinor will be a set of 5 courses with 1 major & 1 minor Project (total 23 Credits) affiliated to any one of theniche areas, which are unique in the sense that there is no double count of courses. These courses will beoffered within the duration of the B.Tech. program through regular or summer term courses. However,flexibilities may allow even those students who may do it with spending one or two terms over and above for

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completing their minors. Those who fulfill all the requirements of a minor successfully will get an additionaltranscript stating details of the courses in the minor.

Salient FeatureFor more details, visit: https://www.lnmiit.ac.in/LCRAI/Minor-in-Robotics-and-Automation.html

Course Structure

Course Semester Credits L-T-P-C

Minor Project Summer Term after SecondSemester (1st Year)

0-0-2-1

Introduction to Automation 3rd 3-0-2-4

Modeling and Design of Robots 4th 3-0-2-4

Programming for Automation and Robotics 5th 1-0-3-3

Control and Optimisation of Automation and RoboticSystems

6th 3-0-2-4

Artificial Intelligence for Robotics and Automation 7th 3-0-2-4

Major Project 7th 3-0-0-3

Total Credits 23

Approval Process of Minor in Robotics and Automation

Sr. No. Date Progress made to start the programme

1. December 5, 2019 Office Order–38/2019: A committee was formed to carry out thebackground work, work on a set of recommendations and courses,structure, delivery of courses, and positioning to create a Minor inRobotics & Automation.

2. January 7, 2020 A meeting held consisting of 10 experts across different departments ofLNMIIT to proceed with the institute level brainstorming to create astructure of minor in Robotics and Automation.

3. February 12,2020

The recommendations received from an external expert, Prof. R. K. Mittal(BITS Pilani) and are used to design and develop the contents andstructures of all the courses of Minor in Robotics & Automation.

4. February 19,2020

First draft proposal of minor prepared incorporating all the suggestionsand comments of the experts.

5. February 28,2020

Meeting held with Director and other experts to prepare the CIFs of all thesubjects of Minor Program.

6. May 13, 2020 Proposal of minor was sent to various experts of Industries and premiereacademic institutions in India and abroad for their valuable feedbacks.

7. May 15, 2020 The updated minor proposal was presented in 3rd BoS meeting to seekcomments and suggestions of BoS members.

8. September 4,2020

A second round of feedback collection organized for the proposal of minorwith some more senior experts of Industries and premiere academicinstitutions in India and abroad.

9. February 28,2021

22nd AC–AAC Meeting Agenda Item No. AAC-A-14.06.01:It is recommended to the AC for further deliberation and guidance.Meanwhile, the department may work out on the full structure of theprogramme along with the course content. A second round of discussionsuggested in the departmental BoS, which was formally performed and

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presented it back to AC-AAC for further deliberations for furtherimprovements.

10. March 20, 2021 The full structured proposal with proposed changes in CIFs and otheraspects of minor was presented in 4th BoS meeting of MME department.

11. July 22, 2021 The updated proposal presented in 23rd AC–AAC meeting and approved inprinciple.

12. August 26, 2021 The revised eligibility criteria proposal for Minor in Robotics andAutomation approved in 24th AC–AAC meeting and the proposed minor isapproved to be floated for the students.

E. M.Tech. in ECE with Specialization in Wireless Communication and Network EngineeringThe M.Tech. program “Mobile Communication” of the Department of ECE is quite old and needs immediatechange of both the program name and the contents to make it more attractive and versatile. The design of

M.Tech. Curriculum should primarily be architectured on the following major principles:● The program should be attractive for the prospective students from the view point of potential job

opportunities, research openings and be competitive with similar programs in other best Institutionswithin the country and abroad.

● The choice of the contents of the curriculum and its diversity should intelligently be decided to fulfillthe current trends, the evolutionary progress and the future visions of the technology that defines theM.Tech. curriculum structure.

● The curriculum design should aim at enhancing the market value of the M.Tech. program inproportion to fulfilling the accelerated growth for the demand of highly skilled manpowerrequirements of major industries and corporate establishments.

In this regard our visions and intelligent drive should attach high priority of the directives of Gartner’sAnalysts to explore the emerging and disruptive technologies such as Wi-Fi including Gig-Fi, 5G cellular, V2Xwireless, low-power wide area networks (LPWA), enhanced location tracking, mm-wave wireless,back-scattering networking, software define network (SDR) etc. This innovative transformation woulddetermine the significant potential and turning point of the emerging wireless technology and creates theadoption roadmap.

The current exercise in reshaping the M.Tech curriculum has adopted effectively the above useful guidelinesto rename the program as “Wireless Communication and Network Engineering” and its contents have beenre-structured to introduce modern subjects, advanced concepts and enhanced practices and the latest trendsin technology that the Industry is working with.

The first draft of the curriculum that has been prepared to achieve some degree of uniqueness as well ascompetitiveness with similar programs existing in the best of universities within the country and abroad. Thefollowing institutions are consulted as regards to their similar programs in wireless Communication.A. Institutions within India: IIT Kharagpur, IIT Indore, IIT Delhi, IIT Guwahati, IIT Jodhpur; IISC Bangalore, IITChennai, IIT Hyderabad; GSSST (IIT KGP), BSTTM (IIT Delhi).

Foreign UniversitiesUniversity of Surrey, George Washington University, Tandon School of Engineering, New York, Cardiff, UK;USC, Viterbi, Southern California; University of Pisa, University of Parma, UCL,UK; University of Southampton,University of Oulu, Tampere University, Austria; UCC, Dublin; NY University, University of Rochester, Caltech,University of Tokyo.

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2.5. AdmissionsLNMIIT offers admissions in both the undergraduate and postgraduate programmes in the fields ofEngineering and Technology and basic Sciences. The information related to admissions is provided below.

Undergraduate AdmissionsLNMIIT offers B.Tech in Communication and Computer Engineering (CCE), Computer Science andEngineering (CSE), Electronics and Communication Engineering (ECE), and Mechanical Engineering (ME) andB. Tech.-M. Tech. (5-Year Integrated Dual Degree) in Computer Science and Engineering (CSE) and Electronicsand Communication Engineering (ECE). Admissions to the above-mentioned programmes are throughfollowing modes. The institute has no provision for either capitation fee or management quota in theadmission process.

I. Regular Mode (For Indian Nationals through JEE (Main) Exam)Admissions under this mode is made on the basis of All India Rank of Joint Entrance Exam (JEE) conducted byNational Testing Agency, New Delhi for Indian Nationals.

Sr. No. Programme Discipline Seats

1. B.Tech.

Communication and Computer Engineering 120

Computer Science and Engineering 240

Electronics and Communication Engineering 150

Mechanical Engineering 60

2.B.Tech. – M.Tech. (5 YearIntegrated Dual Degree)

Computer Science and Engineering 10

Electronics and Communication Engineering 10

Total 590

II. DASA Direct Admissions of Students Abroad (For FN/NRI/OCI/CIWG)Admissions under this mode is open for applicants under following three categories:

a. Foreign Nationals (FN)/ Overseas Citizens of India (OCI): Candidate must have a valid passport issuedby a foreign country.

b. Non-resident Indian (NRI): Candidate must have completed her/his Class 11th and 12th or equivalentfrom outside India.

c. Children of Indian Workers in Gulf Countries (CIWG): Candidate must have completed her/his Class11th and 12th or equivalent from a gulf country (Bahrain, Iraq, Iran, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, SaudiArabia, UAE) and at least one of the parents must be working in a gulf country.

Sr.No.

Programme

DisciplineSeats (Category-wise)

FN/OCI NRI CIWG

1 B.Tech.

Communication and Computer Engineering 12 6 6Computer Science and Engineering 24 12 12Electronics and CommunicationEngineering 15 7 7Mechanical Engineering 6 3 3

Total 57 28 28

III. Direct Mode (Board Toppers)Admissions under this mode is for an applicant who is among

a. Top 10 students in Class 12th examination in the academic year 2020-21 from the Merit List of theRajasthan Board of Secondary Education (RBSE), provided that official Merit List mentioning suchranks is published, OR

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b. Top 2 students in Class 12th examination in the academic year 2020-21 of all those Central and StateBoards in India who publish authorized Merit List indicating ranks.

IV. Lateral Entry Mode (Admission in 3rd semester)Admissions under this mode is open for those applicants fulfilling the following eligibility criteria:

a. The applicant must have secured an aggregate of at least 75% Marks or equivalent GPA/CPI with nobacklog in B.Tech./B.E. Semester I or Semester I and II combined as available.

b. The applicant must have appeared/completed B.Tech./B.E. semester II.c. The applicant must have appeared in JEE (Main) 2020 Examination conducted by the National Testing

Agency (NTA).d. The applicant must have a JEE (Main) 2020 percentile score equal or above the Cut-off scores of the

admission year 2020 in the branch in which admission is sought.e. The applicant must have secured an aggregate of at least 60% Marks or equivalent Grade in Class 12th

Examination.f. The applicant must have secured an aggregate of at least 60% Marks or Equivalent Grade in Physics,

Chemistry, and Mathematics in Class 12th Examination.g. The applicant must have secured an aggregate of at least 60% Marks or equivalent Grade in Class 10th

Examination.

Sr. No. Programme Discipline Seats

1 B.Tech.

Communication and Computer Engineering 1

Computer Science and Engineering 6

Electronics and Communication Engineering 3

Mechanical Engineering 19

Total 29

Admissions 2020–21

Sr.No.

Programme Discipline Intake Number of Students Admitted Total

JEE (Mains) Lateral Admission

Male Female Male Female

1. B.Tech. Communicationand ComputerEngineering

120 113 9 0 0 122

Computer Scienceand Engineering

240 221 25 2 0 248

Electronics andCommunicationEngineering

150 126 22 0 0 148

MechanicalEngineering

60 43 4 0 0 47

2. B.Tech. –M.Tech. (5YearIntegratedDual Degree)

Computer Scienceand Engineering

10 9 3 0 0 12

Electronics andCommunicationEngineering

10 7 2 0 0 9

Total 590 519 65 2 0 586

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Post Graduate Engineering Admissions

Institute offers admission in the following PG Engineering programmes

Programme Branch Seats*

M. Tech. Computer Science and Engineering (CSE)Electronics and Communication Engineering (ECE)

1515

M. S. (by Research) Communication and Computer Engineering (CCE)Computer Science and Engineering (CSE)Electronics and Communication Engineering (ECE)

5

* The number of provisional seats available for admission in PG Programmes at LNMIIT.

Eligibility Criteria

M.Tech. in CSE, ECE andM.S. (by Research) CSE, ECE, CCE

B.E./B.Tech. (In the appropriate branch of Engineering &Technology) with 60% marks or equivalent CPI/ CGPA.

Admission Procedure

Programme Selection Procedure

M. Tech. in CSE,ECE and M. S.(By Research) inCSE, ECE, CCE

All the GATE qualified (in the general category and in the respective subject) candidatesare exempted from the written test. There are two separate merit lists for variouscategories of candidates as described below:

● Category 1. Candidates securing more than 95 percentiles in GATE and having aB. Tech./B. E. degree in the concerned subject are exempted from the interview. Aseparate merit list is prepared for them solely based on their GATE score. Theyare eligible for direct admission and are preferred over the other category ofcandidates for admission.

● Category 2. Merit list of candidates with GATE Score <95 percentile is preparedbased on their performance in the interview only.

● Category 3. Non-GATE qualified candidates having a B. Tech./B. E. degree in theconcerned subject have to appear for both the written test and the interview. Thewritten test is a qualifier for them and they have to secure certain cut-off marksset by the respective department. Candidates must score at least 50% marks inthe written test to be qualified for interview-based merit list.

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● Category 4. Candidates from other relevant disciplines, having a valid GATEscore in the subject they are seeking admission, are considered. Since they arequalified in GATE exam, they are exempted from the written test. However,irrespective of their GATE score, they have to appear for the interview and theirselection is based on their performance in the interview only.

A common merit list of categories 2, 3, and 4 candidates is prepared based on theirperformance in the interview only.

Post Graduate Science AdmissionsLNMIIT offers admissions in two-year M.Sc. programmes in Physics and Mathematics disciplines. For theselection process, the candidates have to appear for a written test and an interview. The JAM qualifiedcandidates will be exempted from the written test. The percentile consideration for the selection in JAM isabove the cut-off score for the general category. A common merit list is prepared based on performances inthe interview.

The institute provides financial support to the students in M.Sc. programmes on the basis of the followingcriteria:

1. A few assistantships (10 students in Mathematics and Physics each) are available, on the basis ofmerit / selection as Teaching / Research Assistantship.

2. The assistantship amount at present is Rs. 5,000/- per month. The student’s progress will bereviewed at the end of each semester and based on that, each Department will recommend the top 10students for financial support for the next semester. For the first semester, top 10 students will getassistance based on their rank in the merit list based on the interview score only.

3. Limited financial assistance for national and international travel to present research work in reputed(Tier - I / Tier - II) referred National / International conferences.

Doctoral AdmissionsThe LNM Institute of Information Technology, Jaipur offers Ph.D. Programmes in Engineering, Sciences,Humanities and Social Sciences. Moreover, the institute encourages quality and purposive interdisciplinaryresearch in areas of its expertise. The broad objective of the Ph.D. Programme at the LNMIIT is to prepare thestudents to pursue their research careers in R&D organizations, industries and academia by way of qualityresearch of both basic and applied kind. The Institute provides a vibrant research atmosphere and invitesapplications from highly motivated applicants for admission to its Ph.D. Programme in the followingdepartments:

1. Computer Science & Engineering2. Electronics & Communication Engineering3. Mechanical-Mechatronics Engineering4. Physics5. Mathematics6. Humanities and Social Sciences

Applications for Ph.D. Programme are invited throughout the year. Admission to the Ph.D. Programme iscarried out twice every year, once during June-July and the next during November-December period. Thefinancial support to the students in Ph.D. programme varies on the basis of the following criteria:

1. Students may avail financial assistantship from external funding agencies (such asUGC/CSIR/NBHM/DST/DAE etc.) as well as from industries.

2. Financial assistance is available from the Institute to the meritorious students in the form of teachingand research assistantship as per Institute norms, for those candidates who may not have anyexternal fellowship.

3. Partial financial support is available to the meritorious students to attend the workshops, short termcourses and for paper presentation in refereed quality conferences as per Institute norms.

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4. Provisions are there for semester fee waiver on account of excellent publications, as per instituterules.

For more details, visit https://admissions.lnmiit.ac.in/phd/index.html.

2.6. Existing Strength of UG/PG/PhD Programme

UG Programmes

Sr. No. Programme Department Year Semester Male Female Total

1. B.Tech. Communication andComputer Engineering

I First 108 9 117

II Third 93 20 113

III Fifth 102 18 120

IV Seventh 58 13 71

Total 361 60 421

2. Computer Science andEngineering

I First 214 24 238

II Third 211 23 234

III Fifth 190 24 214

IV Seventh 157 24 181

Total 772 95 867

3. Electronics andCommunicationEngineering

I First 122 22 144

II Third 100 21 121

III Fifth 90 32 122

IV Seventh 112 23 135

Total 424 98 522

4. Mechanical Engineering I First 39 2 41

II Third 36 5 41

III Fifth 30 3 33

IV Seventh 50 6 56

Total 155 16 171

5. B.Tech. – M.Tech.(5 YearIntegrated DualDegree)

Computer Science andEngineering

I First 9 3 12

II Third 5 5 10

III Fifth 7 1 8

IV Seventh 13 4 17

Total 34 13 47

6. Electronics andCommunicationEngineering

I First 6 2 8

II Third 3 3 6

III Fifth 0 2 2

IV Seventh 5 2 7

Total 14 9 23

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Grand Total 1760 291 2051

PG Engineering Programme

Sr. No. Programme Department Year Semester Male Female Total

1. M.Tech. Computer Science andEngineering

I First 0 0 0

II Third 1 4 5

Total 1 4 5

2. M.Tech. Electronics andCommunication Engineering

I First 0 0 0

II Third 0 1 1

Total 0 1 1

Grand Total 1 5 6

PG Science (M.Sc.) Programme

Sr. No. Department Year Semester Male Female Total

1. Mathematics I First 5 2 7

II Third 12 1 13

Total 17 3 20

2. Physics I First 6 1 7

II Third 7 2 9

Total 13 3 16

Grand Total 30 6 36

PhD Programme

Sr. No. Department Admission Year Male Female Total

1. Computer Science and Engineering 2014-15 2 1 3

2015-16 1 0 1

2016-17 2 0 2

2017-18 0 2 2

2018-19 0 0 0

2019-20 1 0 1

2020-21 3 4 7

Total 9 7 16

2. Electronics and CommunicationEngineering

2014-15 0 0 0

2015-16 0 1 1

2016-17 2 1 3

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2017-18 1 0 1

2018-19 0 3 3

2019-20 2 3 5

2020-21 3 3 6

Total 8 11 19

3. Mechanical and MechatronicsEngineering

2014-15 0 0 0

2015-16 0 0 0

2016-17 1 0 1

2017-18 2 0 2

2018-19 2 0 2

2019-20 2 0 2

2020-21 1 0 1

Total 8 0 8

4. Humanities and Social Sciences 2014-15 0 0 0

2015-16 0 0 0

2016-17 0 1 1

2017-18 0 0 0

2018-19 0 0 0

2019-20 0 0 0

2020-21 0 3 3

Total 0 4 4

5. Mathematics 2014-15 0 0 0

2015-16 0 0 0

2016-17 1 0 1

2017-18 1 0 1

2018-19 4 2 6

2019-20 5 1 6

2020-21 1 0 1

Total 12 3 15

6. Physics 2014-15 0 0 0

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2015-16 0 0 0

2016-17 0 0 0

2017-18 1 0 1

2018-19 2 0 2

2019-20 1 1 2

2020-21 3 1 4

Total 7 2 9

Grand Total 44 27 71

2.7. Examination and EvaluationsExamination (April/May 2021)

Sr.No.

Programme Discipline Batch TotalAppeared

TotalPassed

Above7.5

CGPA

7.5 - 6.0CGPA

Below6.0

CGPA

Name of TopperStudent

1 B.Tech. CCE Y17 73 72 23 46 4 Samyak Jain

Y18 118 117 38 71 9 LatikaSwarnkar

Y19 113 112 27 78 8 Mohit Akhouri

Y20 116 106 45 45 26 Subodh

Total 420 407 133 240 47

CSE Y17 206 200 79 102 25 Anshu Musaddi

Y18 221 217 93 112 16 Patel Parth

Y19 244 237 83 139 22 Gokul Shah

Y20 247 236 113 102 32 Shruti Sharma

Total 918 890 368 455 95

ECE Y17 144 144 49 77 18 Megha Gupta

Y18 124 119 31 82 11 PrithaBhattacharya

Y19 126 123 41 74 11 Piyush Jhawar

Y20 148 135 48 67 33 Anuj Gupta

Total 542 521 169 300 73

ME Y17 61 59 17 34 10 AbhishekThakur

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Y18 33 33 11 17 5 JahanviBudania

Y19 40 39 10 26 4 Kshitij Yadav

Y20 38 34 5 23 10 KrishnaKulshreshtha

Total 172 165 43 100 29

B.Tech. & DD Total 2052 1983 713 1095 244

2 M.Tech. CSE Y19 5 5 2 3 0 Shri KrishnaBansal

Y20 0 0 0 0 0 NIL

Total 5 5 2 3 0

ECE Y19 1 1 0 1 0 Monica Verma

Y20 0 0 0 0 0 NIL

Total 1 1 0 1 0

M.Tech. Total 6 6 2 4 0

3 M.Sc. Physics Y19 9 3 2 1 0 VashisthSharma

Y20 6 5 3 1 2 Komal Malav

Total 15 8 5 2 2

Mathematics

Y19 13 12 3 6 4 Suraj Kanu

Y20 7 5 3 2 2 VaibhavSilmana

Total 20 17 6 8 6

M.Sc. Total 16 8 5 3 2

Grand Total 2074 1997 720 1102 246

2.8. Online Classes, Examination and EvaluationDue to the sudden rise of COVID-19 cases and by following the guidelines of the Government for closure ofon-campus academic activities, in March 2020, The LNMIIT Jaipur shifted to the online mode of teaching. Allthe theory and lab sessions were shifted to the online mode of lecture delivery. The faculty members weretrained to use Google meet as the online platform for the lectures. The training was conducted in threephases. The lab sessions were conducted through the simulations for almost every lab course. The institute’ssoftware was made accessible to the students through a VPN. To enable easy lecture delivery, every facultymember was given a graphic tablet or touch-enabled laptop. Every theory and lab course were organized onGoogle Classroom for sharing the lecture slides and other contents. The faculty members and the studentsvery quickly adapted to these online platforms.The next big task was the evaluation. The institute adopted the learning management system Moodle forevaluation purposes. Moodle Training sessions for the institute faculty were organized in the month of August

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2020. These sessions were held to train the faculty members to get acquainted with the LMS and for thesmooth conduct of the Moodle platform courses for the incoming semesters. Three sessions were heldSession 1: 17th August 2020 10 AM - 12:00 noon around 25 participants.Session 2: 17th August 2020 2 PM - 4:00 PM around 25 participants.Session 3: 18th August 2020 10:00 AM to 12:00 noon around 20 participants.

Prior to these sessions, online resources were generated to train the faculty members about the program. Theresources were hosted on YouTube and made publicly available athttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zYtQYQsJKk0&amp;amp;list=PLVPvCFxS6ake8LV7LNEhZ9eNg9_lAFuA&amp;amp;index=1These resources have helped the community outside the institute as well to get trained on Moodle platform.The videos were uploaded on 31st July 2020, and they are being updated regularly. Once the faculty memberswere trained, and the courses were created, the training for students was held in September 2020. On 19thand 20th September, all 2200 students at the institute were divided into 88 slots, and they were exposed tothe mock drills to give them the real-time experience of the evaluation mechanism. The exams were set onMoodle with the additional security of a safe exam browser. The invigilation was done using Google meet.Every invigilator was assigned 15 students to invigilate at a given time. The students appeared for a30-minute mock drill. The faculty members and the staff members acted as invigilators. These sessions hadlive web, and call-based support and all the doubts were handled in those sessions.

2.9. Scholarships and Financial AssistanceThe institute offers scholarships and financial assistance to undergraduate students. In addition, the financialassistance is provided for postgraduate and doctoral students in lieu of their assistantship in the laboratoryworks for the department. The following scholarships / assistantships are available for the undergraduatestudents.

I. Merit Scholarships

For selective top rankers/meritorious students based on the following academic criteria:

a. First Semester:i. Category-1.1: Top 20 rankers (up to top 5000 rank, in general category) of JEE Advanced exam. The

scholarship amount is up INR 35000 per semester.ii. Category-1.2: Up to next 20 rankers (if up to top 7500 rank, in general category) of JEE Advanced

exam. The scholarship amount is INR 30000 per semester.iii. Category-1.3: Up to next 20 rankers (if up to top 12000 rank, in general category) of JEE Advanced

exam. The scholarship amount is INR 25000 per semester.b. Second Semester onwards: Academic performance at LNMIIT (CGPA of 9.25 or above).

i. Category-2.1: CGPA 9.81-10: The scholarship amount is up to INR 35000 per semester.ii. Category-2.2: CGPA 9.51-9.8: The scholarship amount is up to INR 30000 per semester.

iii. Category-2.3: CGPA 9.25-9.5: The scholarship amount is up to INR 25000 per semester.

II. BPL Scholarships

A few BPL Scholarships are available for the neediest students. Applicable to BPL cardholders andBeneficiaries of the National Food Security Act, 2013 having annual income below one Lac. (In some states onthe adoption of the above Act, the categories of BPL and APL have been merged into new categories, namely,Patra Grihasti (Priority household) and Antyodaya etc.)

Academic Eligibility

i. First Semester: Not Applicable.

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ii. Second Semester onward: For the continuity of the scholarship, the students will have to maintain theprescribed minimum academic performance (Academic eligibility: CGPA of 6.0 and above with no backlogs).The amount is equivalent to the full Tuition fee.

III. Vijay Bhatnagar Scholarship

For a meritorious and economically challenged girl student based on the following criteria. The scholarshipamount is INR 50000 (INR 25000 per semester)

Academic Eligibility

This scholarship is for an academically bright girl student with CGPA 8.5 or above with no backlog.

Financial Eligibility

Parental income below five Lacs per annum.

IV. Merit-cum-Means Assistantship

For a few meritorious and economically challenged students based on the following criteria. Theassistantship amount is equivalent to 50% of the tuition fee.

Academic Eligibility

First Semester: JEE (Advanced) AIR up to 12000 or JEE (Main) Percentile of 97 and above. Second SemesterOnwards: CGPA of 8.50 or above and no backlog.

Financial Eligibility

Parental income below five Lacs per annum.

V. Type “A” Assistantships

Admissible to a few (maximum four recipients, including all years) students facing economic hardships due toloss of bread-earner in the family during the Degree Period. Assistantship amount is equivalent to full tuitionfee.

Financial Eligibility

Parental Income (of the surviving parent/ guardian) 5.0 Lakh per Annum or below. Conditions for continuityof Assistantship: SGPA of 6.50 and above.

VI. Type “B” Assistantships

Admissible to address economic hardships of students (against work in the Departments, Projects, Library,etc.). Assistantship amount is up to 6000/-p.m.

VII. Type “C” Assistantships

Admissible to address economic hardships of (maximum six recipients, including all years) students (againstwork in hostels). Assistantship amount is equivalent to full or partial waivers of hostel fee.

VIII. Type “D” Assistantships

Admissible to a few (maximum two recipients, including all years) students having a single parent who maybe facing significant economic hardships due to no other bread-earner in the family during the Degree Period.Assistantship amount is equivalent to full tuition fee.

Financial Eligibility: Parental Income (of the surviving parent/ guardian) 5.0 Lakh per Annum or below.Conditions for continuity of Assistantship: SGPA of 6.50 and above.

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IX. UG Teaching Assistantships

Available to meritorious students against work in lab/theory courses. Assistantship amount is up to4000/-p.m. No one would be allowed to voluntarily leave an assistantship of this kind when a semester / termis running.

Note: No student shall be eligible for more than one Scholarship/ Assistantship.

The maximum number of each type of Scholarship/Assistantship is fixed in given year as per budgetaryprovisions approved by the Governing Council. In the event of a greater number of eligible applicants,benchmarks of Income and/or Merit, as applicable, shall be used for scrutiny and consequent award ofscholarship/assistantship, subject to attendance, if recorded, not being less than 85%.

The Scholarship/Assistantship is not a matter of right. It is a privilege offered by the Institute to enhanceinternal competition and thereby academic excellence and support the needy. The Institute reserves the rightto eliminate or increase/ decrease the quantum of scholarship/ assistantship and change the policyconditions.

Scholarship/Assistantship policies are reviewed by the Institute from time to time.

Scholarships from external agenciesStudents of LNMIIT have availed different scholarships from various external agencies, as per their respectiverules and provisions, as listed below.

National Scholarship BSF

Mukhyamantri Medhavi Vidyarthi Yojna (MMVY), Govt. ofM.P.

Ministry of Human Resource Development,Govt. of India

Mukhyamantri Yuva Swavlamban Yojana, Govt. of Gujarat Tata Steel Millennium Scholarship

Pragati Scholarship for Girls Indian Railway

National Talent Search Scheme BSNL

Indian Air Force Benevolent Association Student Benevolence Fund

Kendriya Sainik Board (Dept. of Ex-Servicemen Welfare),Ministry of Defence, Govt. of India

Out of above-mentioned scholarships, the following scholarships / assistantships were given to the studentsduring the academic year 2020–21.

● Merit Scholarships● BPL Scholarships● Merit-cum-Means Assistantship● Type “A” Assistantships● Type “D” Assistantships● UG Teaching Assistantships

Merit Scholarship 2020-21

Y-17 ODD SEM 2020-21

Sr. No. Roll No. Name of Student Discipline

1 17UCC074 Samyak Jain CCE

2 17UCC061 Tapish Gupta CCE

3 17UCS185 Anshu Musaddi CSE

4 17UCS184 Aditya Tawri CSE

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5 17UCS042 Ayush Gupta CSE

6 17UCC071 Anubhav Natani CCE

7 17UCS186 Jatin Kumar CSE

8 17UCS034 Arnab Amalan Sinha CSE

9 17UCS143 Saurav Kishore CSE

10 17UCC011 Akshat Jain CCE

11 17UCS070 Honey Agrawal CSE

12 17UCC035 Mohit Kataria CCE

13 17UCS188 Yogesh Agarwal CSE

Y-18 ODD SEM 2020-21

Sr. No. Roll No. Name of Student Discipline

1 18UCS015 Patel Parth CSE

2 18UCS072 Pooja Singhal CSE

3 18UCS231 Rishabh Iain CSE

4 18UCS229 Kushagra Chatlrvedy CSE

5 18UCS228 Dev Ashish Purohit CSE

6 18UCS227 Ayush Rathi CSE

7 18UCC078 Latika Swarnkar CCE

8 18UCC164 Archit Khandelwal CCE

9 18UCS163 Pulkit Jain CSE

10 18UCS117 Priyal Maeshwari CSE

11 18UCS230 Privanshu Jain CSE

Y-19 ODD SEM 2020-21

Sr. No. Roll No. Name of Student Discipline

1 19UCS054 Gaurav Niranian CSE

2 19UCS057 Aniket Shukla CSE

3 19UCS121 Gokul Shah CSE

4 19UCS035 Meet Kumar Jain CSE

5 19UCS241 Abhishek Kumar CSE

6 19UCS021 Avinav Jain CSE

7 19UCS060 Saurav Somani CSE

Y-20 ODD SEM 2020-21

Sr. No. Roll No. Name of Student Discipline

1 20UCS161 Rithvik Jain CSE

2 20UCS140 Pranav Mehta CSE

3 20UCS180 Shekhar Bansal CSE

4 20UCS219 Vansh Gupta CSE

5 20UCS143 Prashant Yadav CSE

6 20UCS015 Akshat Goyal CSE

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7 20UCS228 Vinayak Mishra CSE

8 20UCS209 Tanya Vijay CSE

9 20UCS216 Vaibhav Gupta CSE

Y-17 EVEN SEM 2020-21

Sr. No. Roll No. Name of Student Discipline

1 17UCC074 Samyak Jain CCE

2 17UCS185 Anshu Musaddi CSE

3 17UCC061 Tapish Gupta CCE

4 17UCC071 Anubhav Natani CCE

5 17UCS042 Ayush Gupta CSE

6 17UCC011 Akshat Jain CCE

7 17UCS070 Honey Agrawal CSE

8 17UCS184 Aditya Tawri CSE

9 17UCS034 Arnab Amalan Sinha CSE

10 17UCS186 Jatin Kumar CSE

11 17UCC035 Mohit Kataria CCE

Y-18 EVEN SEM 2020-21

Sr. No. Roll No. Name of Student Discipline

1 18UCS015 Patel Parth CSE

2 18UCS072 Pooja Singhal CSE

3 18UCS231 Rishabh Iain CSE

4 18UCS227 Ayush Rathi CSE

5 18UCS163 Pulkit Jain CSE

6 18UCS229 Kushagra Chatlrvedy CSE

7 18UCS228 Dev Ashish Purohit CSE

8 18UCC164 Archit Khandelwal CCE

9 18UCC078 Latika Swarnkar CCE

10 18UCS117 Priyal Maeshwari CSE

11 18UCS230 Privanshu Jain CSE

Y-19 EVEN SEM 2020-21

Sr. No. Roll No. Name of Student Discipline

1 19UCS054 Gaurav Niranian CSE

2 19UCS121 Gokul Shah CSE

3 19UCS057 Aniket Shukla CSE

4 19UCS241 Abhishek Kumar CSE

5 19UCS035 Meet Kumar Jain CSE

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Y-20 EVEN SEM 2020-21

Sr. No. Roll No. Name of Student Discipline

1 20UCS243 Anuj Gupta CSE

2 20UCS189 Shruti Sharma CSE

3 20UCS191 Shiv Tyagi CSE

BPL SCHOLARSHIP

BPL SCHOLARSHIP - ODD SEM JULY - DEC 2020

Sr. No. Roll No. Name of Student Discipline

1 17UCS067 Himanshu Agrawal CSE

2 17UEC099 Rohit Sharma ECE

3 19UCC082 Ashutosh Kumar CCE

4 19UCS219 Pushkar Raj Upadhyay CSE

5 19UEC094 Ujala Rao ECE

BPL SCHOLARSHIP - EVEN SEM JAN - MAY 2021

Sr. No. Roll No. Name of Student Discipline

1 17UCS067 Himanshu Agrawal CSE

2 17UEC099 Rohit Sharma ECE

3 19UCC082 Ashutosh Kumar CCE

4 19UCS219 Pushkar Raj Upadhyay CSE

5 19UEC094 Ujala Rao ECE

6 20UCC081 Pulkit Pandey CCE

7 20UCS224 Vasu Sachdeva CSE

8 20UEC007 Aditya Raj ECE

9 20UME037 Prabhav Sharma ME

TYPE-D ASSISTANTSHIP

TYPE-D ASSISTANTSHIP - ODD SEM JULY - DEC 2020

Sr.No.

Roll No. Name of Student Discipline

1 17UCC020 Deepak Kumar Singh CCE

2 19DEC009 Uddhav Garg ECE-D

TYPE-D ASSISTANTSHIP - EVEN SEM JAN - MAY 2021

Sr.No.

Roll No. Name of Student Discipline

1 19DEC009 Uddhav Garg ECE-D

TYPE-A ASSISTANTSHIP

TYPE-A ASSISTANTSHIP - ODD SEM JULY - DEC 2020

Sr. No. Roll No. Name of Student Discipline

1 17UCS017 Aman Raheja CSE

2 17UCS028 Ansh Mittal CSE

3 17UCS097 Naman Kumar Garg CSE

4 17UME049 Sandeep Kumar Onkarnath Singh ME

Page | 45

TYPE-A ASSISTANTSHIP- EVEN SEM JAN - MAY 2021

Sr. No. Roll No. Name of Student Discipline

1 17UCS097 Naman Kumar Garg CSE

2 17UME049 Sandeep Kumar Onkarnath Singh ME

3 18UCS091 Pinkesh Unadkat CSE

4 20UCS048 Ayush Varshney CSE

5 20UEC121 Shivam Yadav ECE

6 20UEC134 Sumant Kumar Pandey ECE

MCM ASSISTANTSHIP

MCM ASSISTANTSHIP - ODD SEM JULY - DEC 2020

Sr. No. Roll No. Name of Student Discipline

1 18UCS082 Apoorv Jain CSE

2 18UME066 Jahanvi Budania ME

3 19UCS262 Jaskarn Singh CSE

MCM ASSISTANTSHIP- ODD SEM JULY - DEC 2020

Sr. No. Roll No. Name of Student Discipline

1 20UCS017 Aman Manish Agarwal CSE

2 20UCS022 Anmol Jain CSE

3 20UCS048 Ayush Varshney CSE

4 20UCS110 Mananjot Singh CSE

5 20UCS160 Rishikesh Ladha CSE

6 20UCS225 Vatsal Prakash Mehta CSE

7 20UCS227 Vinay Sunil Bhagwat CSE

MCM ASSISTANTSHIP- EVEN SEM JAN - MAY 2021

Sr. No. Roll No. Name of Student Discipline

1 18UCS082 Apoorv Jain CSE

2 18UME066 Jahanvi Budania ME

3 19UCS262 Jaskarn Singh CSE

4 20UCS037 Aryan CSE

5 20UCS189 Shruti Sharma CSE

6 20UCS245 Himanshu Mittal CSE

UG Assistantship

Sr. No. Roll No Name of Student Discipline

1 19DEC009 Uddhav Garg ECE

2 19UEC100 Eashana Bharakatia ECE

3 19UCC091 Maitrayee Pandey CCE

4 19UEC037 Piyush Jhawar ECE

5 19UEC014 Himanshu Goyal ECE

6 19UEC135 Shreyash Yadav ECE

7 19UEC130 Manthan Jain ECE

Page | 46

Department-wise Scholarships during 2020-21

Scholarship/Discipline

CSE CCE ECE ME Total

Merit 55 14 1 0 70

BPL 5 3 5 1 14

Type-D 0 1 2 0 3

Type-A 6 0 2 2 10

MCM 14 0 0 2 16

UG TA 0 1 6 0 7

Total 80 19 16 5 120

2.10. Convocation 2020The 14th Convocation of our institute was held on 21st November, 2020 in Virtual Mode. The convocationaddress was delivered by the chief guest, Mr. C P Gurnani, who has been the CEO and MD of Tech Mahindra,one of the leading digital IT solution providers of India. With extensive experience in international businessdevelopment, start-ups and turnarounds, joint ventures, mergers, and acquisitions, Mr. Gurnani has

Page | 47

spearheaded Tech Mahindra's transformational journey. A chemical engineering graduate from the NationalInstitute of Technology, Rourkela, Mr. Gurnani has also served as Chairman of NASSCOM for the year2016-2017. In a career spanning over 39 years. He has held several leading positions with HP. Perot Systems(India) Ltd. and HCL Corporation. He has been the recipient of numerous awards, including the Best CEOAward in 2019, Corporate Leader of the Year Award in 2018, and Asia 'One Global Indian of the Year -Technology in 2016. For his entrepreneurial style of management, Mr. Gurnani has been listed in the top 100global CEOs in the Wall Street Journal CEO Council 2016. He also received the Forbes India Leadership Awardas the "Best CEO of the Year" in 2015 and the Best CEO of the year in Business Today in 2014. He promoteschild education and has also co-founded Titliyan, an NGO located in Noida that shelters and educates morethan 140 underprivileged children.

In this convocation, a total number of 514 students graduated; out of which 495 received B.Tech 18 studentswere awarded M.Sc. degrees and one student was awarded Ph.D. degree. The Chairman's Gold Medal wasawarded to Ms. Pankhuri Vanjani (16UEC069) of Electronics and Communication Engineering. The Director'sGold Medal for UG programme was awarded to Mr. Vishesh Sharma (16UCS215) of Computer Science andEngineering. The best B.Tech. project Award was earned by a group of students, namely, Mr. Tirth Shah(16UCS199). Mr. Vibhor Agarwal (16UCS209) and Mr. Swarnim (16UEC111) for the B.Tech. Project on"Pro-Active Video Surveillance System for Female Security in Isolated Areas".

A Few Glimpses from Convocation 2020

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3. ACADEMIC & ADMINISTRATIVE STAFF

The LNMIIT Organizational Structure

Organogram: Non-Teaching

Page | 50

Organogram: Teaching

3.1. Faculty Members

DEPARTMENT OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

Rahul BanerjeeProfessor & DirectorPh.D., Faculty of Engineering &Tech., AUResearch Areas: ComputerNetworking, WearableComputing, UbiquitousComputing (CPS/IoT)

Ravi Prakash GorthiEmeritus ProfessorPh.D., IIT MadrasResearch Areas:Software & PerformanceEngineering, Human ComputerInteraction, ArtificialIntelligence

Vishv Mohan MalhotraVisiting ProfessorPh.D., IIT KanpurResearch Areas: SoftwareEngineering, ProgrammingLanguages, SensorNetworks

C. Pandu RanganVisiting ProfessorPh.D., IIT MadrasResearch Areas: Cryptographyand Security Protocols, Graphtheory, Computational Geometry,Randomized : and ParallelAlgorithms

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Phillip MillerVisiting ProfessorPh.D., Ohio State UniversityResearch Areas: SoftwareEngineering and Development

Jayaprakash KarAssociate Professor,Ph.D., Utkal University,BhubaneswarResearch Areas: Cryptology,Provable Security, Bitcoin &Cryptocurrency Technologiesand Cyber Security

Preety SinghAssociate Professor & HoDPh.D., MNIT, JaipurResearch Areas: Video andImage Processing, Biometrics,Pattern Recognition , MachineLearning, Deep Learning

Sakthi Balan MuthiahAssociate Professor,Ph.D., IIT MadrasResearch Areas: Social NetworkAnalysis, Data Science,Biocomputing, Formal Languageand Automata Theory

Subrat Kumar DashAssociate ProfessorPh.D., University of HyderabadResearch Areas: SystemSecurity, Data Mining, BehaviourModeling

Aloke Dutta,Assistant ProfessorPh.D., Jadavpur UniversityResearch Areas: MachineLearning & Pattern Recognition,Image Processing, HyperspectralImage Analysis

Anukriti BansalAssistant ProfessorPh.D., IIT DelhiResearch Areas: ImageProcessing, Machine Learning,Pattern Recognition

Animesh ChaturvediAssistant ProfessorPh.D., IIT, IndoreResearch Areas: Systems/Software Engineering, DataScience and Analytics, Big data,Cloud Computing

Anugrah JainAssistant ProfessorPh.D., MNIT, JaipurResearch Areas: ComputerVision, Image Restoration, andImage Synthesis

Bharavi MishraAssistant ProfessorPh.D., IIT (BHU) VaranasiResearch Areas: Data Mining,Machine Learning & SoftComputing, Security and Privacy

Indra Deep MastanAssistant ProfessorPh.D., IIT GandhinagarResearch Areas: ComputerVision, Image Restoration, andImage Synthesis

Mohit GuptaAssistant ProfessorPh.D., VNIT, NagpurResearch Areas: NetworkSecurity

Mukesh Kumar JadonAssistant ProfessorPh.D. (Pursuing), LNMIIT, JaipurResearch Areas: Data and TextMining

Nirmal Kumar SivaramanAssistant Professor, Ph.D.(Pursuing), LNMIIT, JaipurResearch Areas: CognitiveModelling, Social NetworkAnalysis, Web Science

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Nitin KumarAssistant ProfessorPh.D., IIT BombayResearch Areas: Medical ImageComputing, Computer Vision,Applied Machine Learning inImage Analysis

Nilotpal ChakrabortyAssistant ProfessorPh.D., IIT PatnaResearch Areas: Cyber PhysicalSystems, Algorithms

Poonam GeraAssistant ProfessorPh.D., IIT RoorkeeResearch Areas: Security inMANETs, Cloud Security,Network Security

Poulami DalapatiAssistant ProfessorPhD, NIT DurgapurResearch Areas: ArtificialIntelligence, Autonomous Agent& multiagent based systems,Distributed Systems,Transportation Scheduling

Rajbir KaurAssistant Professor & DeputyHoD Ph.D., MNIT, JaipurResearch Areas: Security inMobile Ad-Hoc Networks,Internet of Things (loT)

Ram Prakash SharmaAssistant ProfessorPh.D., IIT IndoreResearch Areas: Biometrics,Image Processing, Machinelearning

Saurabh KumarAssistant ProfessorPh.D., SVNIT SuratResearch Areas: Internet ofThings, Collaborative DataProcessing, Multiagent Systems,Wireless Sensor Networks

Shweta BhandariAssistant ProfessorPh.D., MNIT, JaipurResearch Areas: InformationSystem Security, Mobile Security

Suvidha TripathiAssistant Professor(Contractual) PhD, IIITAllahabadResearch Areas: Medical ImageAnalysis, Computer Vision,Applications of Deep learningand Machine Learning inComputer Vision, ImageProcessing

Sudheer Kumar SharmaAssistant ProfessorPh.D., JNU New DelhiResearch Areas: ComputationalNeuroscience, StochasticModeling, Information Theory &Machine Learning

Sunil KumarAssistant ProfessorPh.D., LNMIIT JaipurResearch Areas: loT, CPS,Sensor Networks, DistributedSystems, Multi-core Systems

Varun Kumar SharmaAssistant ProfessorPh.D., Jaypee University ofEngg. & Tech., GunaResearch Area: NetworkCommunication

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Vikas BajpaiAssistant Professor, Ph.D.(Pursuing), LNMIIT, JaipurResearch Areas: SoftwareRequirements Engineering,Software Testing, SoftwareQuality Assurance, ArchitectingSoftware

Vineeta JainAssistant ProfessorPh.D., MNIT JaipurResearch Areas: NetworkSecurity, Security ProtocolsDesign & Analysis, AutomatedTechniques for FormalVerification, AppliedCryptography, Mobile Security

DEPARTMENT OF ELECTRONICS & COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING

Raghuvir Singh TomarProfessor & HoDCentre Lead: CET–TLIPh.D., IIT KanpurResearch Areas:Electromagnetics, RadioFrequency and Microwaves,Antennas

Ranjan GangopadhyayResearch Professor & CentreLead: C-NGCN,Ph.D., IIT KharagpurResearch Areas: Photonics &Wireless Communication,Cognitive Radio

Divyang RawalAssociate ProfessorPh.D., DAIICT GandhinagarResearch Areas: ICT, SignalProcessing for Communication

Kusum LataAssociate ProfessorPh.D., IISc BangaloreResearch Areas: Analog & MixedSignal Design, Modeling andDesign of VLSI Circuits, LowPower and Circuit Design

Soumitra DebnathAssociate ProfessorPh.D., IIT KharagpurResearch Areas: OpticalNetworks, Queuing Theory,Cognitive Radio

Abhishek SharmaAssistant ProfessorPh.D., University of Genova, ItalyResearch Areas: EmbeddedSystems and High-PerformanceEmbedded Computing

Akash GuptaAssistant ProfessorPh.D., NSIT DelhiResearch Areas: Optical WirelessComm., Visible LightCommunication, EnergyHarvesting, loT applications

Amit AgarwalAssistant ProfessorPh.D., IIT DelhiResearch Areas: Wirelesscommunication, cooperativerelaying, VLC, MIMO, SWIPTsystems

Anirudh AgarwalAssistant ProfessorPh.D., LNMIIT, JaipurResearch Areas: 5G WirelessComm. Green Comm. Networks(involving Wireless PowerTransfer), Applied MachineLearning and Optimization

Bharat VermaAssistant ProfessorPh.D., IIITDM JabalpurResearch Areas: Control System,Indirect Design Approach, PIDControl, Intelligent Control,Bio-medical Signal Processing

Page | 54

Chirag KumarAssistant ProfessorPh.D., IIT KanpurResearch Area: Optimization inSignal Processing, PatternRecognition

Gopinath SamantaAssistant ProfessorPh.D., IIEST ShibpurResearch Area: Implantable andWearable Antenna, WirelessPower Transfer, Tera HertzAntenna and Tera HertzElectromagnetic Absorber,Meta-surface for performanceimprovement of Antenna.

Gaurav ChatterjeeAssistant ProfessorPh.D., LIRMM-CNRS,Montpellier FranceResearch Areas: MEMS, Sensors,Robotics

Harshvardhan KumarAssistant ProfessorPh.D., NIT DelhiResearch Areas: Optoelectronicdevices, nano-photonics, &electronic devices, Silicon-basedphotonics, & GeSn-basedphotodetectors and light emitters.

Joyeeta SinghaAssistant ProfessorPh.D., NIT SilcharResearch Areas: Image and VideoProcessing, Hand GestureRecognition

Kanjalochan JenaAssistant ProfessorPh.D., NIT SilcharResearch Areas: Solid-StateDevices, Nanotechnology andBiosensors: Compact Modelingand Simulation

M. V. Deepak NairAssistant ProfessorPh.D., University of Rome,Tor-Vergata, ItalyResearch Areas: LinearizationTechnique. for High FrequencyPower Amplifier

Mahendra Kumar ShuklaAssistant ProfessorPh.D., IIIT AllahabadResearch Areas: CooperativeRelaying, NOMA, EnergyHarvesting, Physical Layer Secrecy

Mohit Kumar JoshiAssistant ProfessorPhD., IIT GuwahatiResearch Areas: High-PowerMicrowave Source, MicrowaveTubes, Slow-wave Structures, RFWindows, Electromagnetics

Navneet UpadhyayAssistant ProfessorPh.D., BITS PilaniResearch Areas: SpeechProcessing, DigitalCommunication

Nikhil RajAssistant ProfessorPh.D., NIT KurukshetraResearch Areas: Low PowerAnalog & Mixed Signal Design,Bio-inspired Circuit Design

Nikhil SharmaAssistant ProfessorPh.D., NSIT DelhiResearch Areas: Wireless Comm.Cooperative Communication,Free-space Optics, Visible LightCommunication

Purnendu KarmakarAssistant ProfessorPh.D. (Pursuing), IIT KharagpurResearch Areas: Wireless Comm.Computer Networks, Trust andReputation in Virtual Communityand Social Network.

Sandeep SainiAssistant ProfessorPh.D., MNIT JaipurResearch Areas: VLSI Design,Microelectronics

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Santosh ShahAssistant ProfessorPh.D., Universidad de ValenciaSpainResearch Areas: WirelessSensors Networks

Shankar BhattacharjeeAssistant ProfessorPh.D., IIEST, ShibpurResearch Areas: RF & MicrowaveEngineering

Suvadeep ChoudhuryAssistant ProfessorPh.D., IIT KharagpurResearch Areas: Antennas, RF &Microwave Engineering

Vinay BankeyAssistant ProfessorPh.D., IIT IndoreResearch Areas: WirelessCommunications, Physical LayerSecurity, NOMA

Vinay Kumar TiwariAssistant ProfessorPh.D., IIT IndoreResearch Areas: VLSI SignalProcessing, VLSI HardwareArchitecture, HarmonicsEstimation DSP, FPGA BasedMeasurement System for SmartGrid Instrumentation Applications

DEPARTMENT OF MECHANICAL-MECHATRONICS ENGINEERING

Ashok Kumar DargarAssociate Professor & HoDPh.D., Jamia Millia IslamiaUniversity, DelhiResearch Areas: Synthesis andAnalysis of Kinematic Chainsand Mechanisms

Kamal Kishore KhatriAssociate ProfessorPh.D., MNIT, JaipurResearch Areas: Alternate Fuelsin IC Engines, Trigeneration,Modeling and Simulation ofThermal/Energy Systems,Application of Nano-fluidsz

Manoj KumarAssociate ProfessorPh.D., IIT DelhiResearch Areas: Production andIndustrial Engineering, WeldingTechnology

Vikram SharmaAssociate ProfessorPh.D., Guru Gobind SinghIndraprastha University, DelhiResearch Areas: Supply ChainManagement, Lean Manufacturing

Atul MishraAssistant ProfessorPh.D., IIT KharagpurResearch Areas: Industrial andMobile Robotics, ProductionPlanning and Control, ArtificialIntelligence in Manufacturing

Deepak R. UnuneAssistant ProfessorPh.D., MNIT, JaipurResearch Areas: HybridMachining Processes, ElectroDischarge Machine. Modelling &Analysis of Mech. Systems

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Mohit MakkarAssistant ProfessorPh.D., University of Lille 1, FranceResearch Areas: Robotics,Modeling and Simulation, Designof Control Systems, SystemDynamics

Praveen Kumar SharmaAssistant ProfessorPh.D., IIT HyderabadResearch Areas: Dynamics ofDrop Impacting a Dry RigidSurface

Servesh Kumar AgnihotriAssistant ProfessorPh.D., IIT KanpurResearch Areas: Fracturemechanics, Experimental SolidMechanics, functionally gradedcomposites

Vikas SharmaAssistant ProfessorPh.D., IIT IndoreResearch Areas: Gears andBearings, Vibrations, ConditionMonitoring, Fault Diagnosis, SignalProcessing Techniques

Dr. Arpi MajumderGuest FacultyPh.D., Jadavpur UniversityKolkataResearch Areas: Synthesis ofmetal complexes for theapplication in coupling reactions

DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICS

Anupam SinghProfessorPh.D., Carnegie MellonUniversity, USAResearch Areas: High EnergyPhysics and Cosmology

Ganesh Dutt SharmaProfessorPh.D., IIT DelhiResearch Areas: OrganicElectronics, Organic Solar Cells,Dye Sensitized Solar Cells,Nano-Science & Technology

Somnath BiswasProfessorPh.D., IIT KharagpurResearch Areas: MagneticNanomaterials andNano-stuctures, SpintronicDevices, FET-based SensorDevices, Materials for Fuel Cellsand Hydrogen Storage

Ashok GaraiAssociate ProfessorPh.D., IIT KanpurResearch Areas: Theoretical &Computational Biophysics,Molecular Motors, GeneticNetworks, Theory of SingleMolecular Pulling Experiments,DNA Nanomechanics

Subhayan BiswasAssociate Professor & HoDPh.D., IACS, KolkataResearch Areas: ThirdGeneration Solar Cells,Photocatalysis

Amit NeogiAssistant ProfessorPh.D., IIT KanpurResearch Areas: Laser Plasma

Page | 57

Anjishnu SarkarAssistant ProfessorPh.D., IIT BombayResearch Areas: Cosmology,Particle Physics, SupersymmetricModel Building

Manish Kumar SinghAssistant ProfessorPh.D., MNNIT, AllahabadResearch Areas: Solid StatePhysics, Electronics,Nanomaterials, Laser Ablation inLiquids & Biosensors

Nabyendu DasAssistant ProfessorPh.D., Institute of Physics,BhubaneswarResearch Areas: TheoreticalCondensed Matter Physics

Pomita GhoshalAssistant ProfessorPh.D., HRI, AllahabadResearch Areas: Particle Physics

Rakesh TibrewalaAssistant Professor, Ph.D., TataInstitute of FundamentalResearch, MumbaiResearch Areas: GeneralRelativity, Aspects of QuantumGravity

DEPARTMENT OF MATHEMATICS

Mohan K. KadalbajooDistinguished ProfessorPh.D., IIT BombayResearch Areas: NumericalAnalysis, Parallel Algorithms,Computational PDEs,Computational Finance

Ajit PatelAssociate ProfessorPh.D., IIT BombayResearch Areas: NumericalAnalysis, Computational PDEs,Finite Element Methods

Manish GargAssociate ProfessorPh.D., IIT RoorkeeResearch Areas: Cryptography,Boolean Functions and Finite Field

Pratibha GargAssociate Professor & HoDPh.D., IIT DelhiResearch Areas: Topological andFunction Space

Vikas GuptaAssociate ProfessorPh.D., IIT KanpurResearch Areas: NumericalAnalysis, Singularly PerturbedProblems, B-spline

Dishari ChaudhuryAssistant ProfessorPh.D., IIT GuwahatiResearch Areas:Non-Commutative Algebras andLie Algebras

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NeerajAssistant ProfessorPh.D., IISER MohaliResearch Areas: CommutativeAlgebras and Number Theory

Ratan Kumar GiriAssistant ProfessorPh.D., NIT RourkelaResearch Areas: PartialDifferential Equations (PDEs),Theoretical aspects of nonlinear elliptic and parabolic PDEs

Sunil Kumar GauttamAssistant ProfessorPh.D., IIT BombayResearch Areas: StochasticControl, Probability Theory,Stochastic Processes

Sudipto ChowdhuryAssistant ProfessorPh.D., IISc BangaloreResearch Areas: NumericalAnalysis

Trivedi Harsh ChandrakantAssistant ProfessorPh.D., IIT BombayResearch Areas: FunctionalAnalysis

DEPARTMENT OF HUMANITIES AND SOCIAL SCIENCES

Manju DhariwalProfessorPh.D., University of RajasthanResearch Areas: ModernistStudies, Gender and FeministLitrature, Indian Writing in English

A. P. SinghAdjunct ProfessorMBA, JBIMS Mumbai

Usha KanoongoAssociate Professor & HoDPh.D., University of RajasthanResearch Areas: AppliedLinguistics, English LanguageTeaching, Computer-mediatedCommunication

Narendra KumarAssociate ProfessorPh.D., University of RajasthanResearch Areas: PostcolonialStudies, Cultural Studies,Literatures of the IndianSubcontinent, Adaptation Studies

Rajbala SinghAssociate ProfessorPh.D., IIT KanpurResearch Areas: HealthPsychology, Psychology ofTechnology, OrganizationalBehaviour

Anu MalikAssistant ProfessorPh.D., IIT KanpurResearch Areas: HealthPsychology

Payel PalAssistant ProfessorPh.D., IIT KanpurResearch Areas: AmericanLiterature,Feminist Literature, DiasporaLiterature

Sagnik BagchiAssistant ProfessorPh.D., IIT BombayResearch Areas: InternationalTrade, Applied Econometrics

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Surinder Singh NehraAssistant ProfessorPh.D., University of PuneResearch Areas: Social SecurityUrbanisation, Infrastructure

G. C. TikkiwalGuest FacultyPh.D., University of RajasthanResearch Areas: StochasticProcess

Existing Strength of Faculty Members

Sr. No. Department Strength

1 Computer Science and Engineering 33

2 Electronics and Communication Engineering 29

3 Mechanical-Mechatronics Engineering 11

4 Humanities and Social Sciences 10

5 Mathematics 11

6 Physics 11

Total 105

List of Promotions during 2020-21

Sr. No. Faculty Department OldDesignation

NewDesignation

WEF Date ofPromotion

1 Dr. ManishGarg

Mathematics AssistantProfessor

AssociateProfessor

20 August 2020 31 August 2020

2 Dr. UshaKanoongo

HSS AssistantProfessor

AssociateProfessor

20 August 2020 31 August 2020

3 Dr. DivyangRawal

ECE AssistantProfessor

AssociateProfessor

20 August 2020 31 August 2020

4 Dr. AshokGarai

Physics AssistantProfessor

AssociateProfessor

20 August 2020 31 August 2020

5 Dr. PreetySingh

CSE AssistantProfessor

AssociateProfessor

20 August 2020 31 August 2020

Page | 60

6 Dr. ChandSingh Panwar

Medical ResidentMedicalOfficer

Sr. ResidentMedicalOfficer

1 April 2021 1 April 2021

New Recruitees during 2020-21

Sr. No. Name of Faculty Department Joining Date Designation Regular/Visiting/Contract

1 Dr. Mohit Gupta CSE 1 August 2020 AssistantProfessor

Regular

2 Dr. ShankarBhattacharjee

ECE 5 August 2020 AssistantProfessor

Regular

3 Dr. AnimeshChaturvedi

CSE 5 August 2020 AssistantProfessor

Regular

4 Dr. Poulami Dalpati CSE 1 September2020

AssistantProfessor

Regular

5 Ms. Suvidha Tripathi CSE 1 January 2021 AssistantProfessor

Contract

6 Dr. C. Pandurangan CSE 1 January 2021 Visiting Professor Visiting

7 Dr. Dishari Choudhury Mathematics 1 February2021

AssistantProfessor

Regular

8 Dr. SuvadeepChoudhary

ECE 25 February2021

AssistantProfessor

Regular

9 Mr. Neeraj Mathematics 25 February2021

AssistantProfessor

Regular

10 Dr. Vinay Banky ECE 17 February2021

AssistantProfessor

Regular

11 Dr. Mahendra KumarShukla

ECE 1 March 2021 AssistantProfessor

Regular

12 Dr. HarshvardhanKumar

ECE 15 March 2021 AssistantProfessor

Regular

13 Dr. Amit Agarwal ECE 22 March 2021 AssistantProfessor

Regular

14 Prof. Philip L. Miller CSE 1 April 2021 Visiting Professor Visiting

15 Dr. Ratan Kumar Giri Mathematics 1 May 2021 AssistantProfessor

Regular

16 Dr. Vineeta Jain CSE 18 May 2021 AssistantProfessor

Regular

17 Dr. Indra Deep Mastan CSE 3 June 2021 AssistantProfessor

Regular

18 Dr. Atul Mishra MME 17 June 2021 AssistantProfessor

Regular

List of Resignations during 2020-21

Sr.No.

Name of Faculty Department Date of Relieve Designation Regular/Visiting/Contract

1 Dr. Vibhor Kant CSE 5 August 2020 Assistant Professor Regular

2 Dr. Kshitiz Verma CSE 14 August 2020 Assistant Professor Regular

Page | 61

3 Dr. Pramod Gaur CSE 12 December 2020 Assistant Professor Regular

4 Ms. Sonu Lamba CSE 31 December 2020 Assistant Professor Regular

5 Dr. Ankit Choudhary CSE 31 December 2020 Assistant Professor Regular

6 Ms. RoshniChakraborty

CSE 1 December 2020 Guest Faculty Visiting

7 Dr. Somnath Maiti Mathematics 10 July 2020 Assistant Professor Regular

8 Prof. Chandra BhanGupta

Mathematics 31 December 2020 Visiting Professor Visiting

9 Dr. Rajiv Kumar Mathematics 22 September2020

Assistant Professor Regular

10 Dr. Syed MohammedHasan Rizvi

Mathematics 31 March 2021 Guest Faculty Visiting

11 Mr. Surendra DeochandBarewar

MME 31 March 2021 Guest Faculty Visiting

12 Mr. Abhishek KumarSingh

ECE 23 June 2021 Assistant Professor Contract

3.2. Academic Staff

DEPARTMENT OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

Shivam MaheshwariJunior TechnicalSuperintendent

Shivangee SinghJunior TechnicalSuperintendent

Manish Kumar MittalJunior TechnicalSuperintendent

Dinesh Kumar SharmaJunior TechnicalSuperintendent

DEPARTMENT OF ELECTRONICS & COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING

Kamta SharmaTechnical Superintendent

Dharm Pal YadavJunior Technical Superintendent

Vinod KumarTechnical Superintendent

Pavan Kumar SharmaJunior Technical Superintendent

Page | 62

Kushmakar SharmaJunior Technical Superintendent

Raj KumarJunior Technical Superintendent

DEPARTMENT OF MECHANICAL-MECHATRONICS ENGINEERING

Bhagwan SinghTechnical Superintendent

Sandeep Kumar SaxenaTechnical Superintendent

Satish YadavJunior Technical Superintendent

Satyanarayana PrajapatiJunior Technical Superintendent

Udayveer SinghJunior Technical Superintendent

Tej Bahadur YadavJunior Technician

DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICS

Laxmi Narayan SharmaSenior Lab Technician

List of New Recruitee during 2020-21

Sr.No.

Name of Employee Designation Department Date of Joining

1 Dinesh Kumar Sharma Jr. Technical Superintendent CSE 08.01.2020

2 Mukesh Kumar Bhardwaj Junior Assistant Administration 25.02.2020

3 Abhishek Jain Junior Assistant CSE and Mathematics 27.02.2020

4 Kundan Singh Shahi Junior Assistant Physics and ECE 18.05.2020

Page | 63

List of Resignations during 2020-21

Sr. No. Name of Employee Designation Department Left

1 Raj Kumar Jr. Technical Superintendent ECE 15/May/21

3.3. List of PhD Scholars

Sr. No. Name Research Area Supervisor Discipline

1 Mr. Vikas Bajpai Design and Analysis of DeepLearning Models for RainfallPrediction

Dr. AnukritiBansal

Computer Scienceand Engineering

2 Mr. Arpan Gupta Activity Recognition in Videos Dr. Sakthi Balan Computer Scienceand Engineering

3 Ms. MeenakshiGupta

Vehicular Adhoc Networks Dr. Poonam Gera Computer Scienceand Engineering

4 Mr. Mukesh KumarJadon

Broadly it is Text Mining andspecifically Word embeddings inNLP.

Dr. BharaviMishra

Computer Scienceand Engineering

5 Ms. Manju Rani Internet of Things Dr. SubratKumar Dash

Computer Scienceand Engineering

6 Ms. Shweta Gupta Recommender Systems Dr. Vibhor Kant Computer Scienceand Engineering

7 Mr. SoumilMukherjee

An empirical investigation on Leanmanufacturing practices inmedium-sized Europeanpharmaceutical componentmanufacturing industry

Prof. R P Gorthi,Dr. VikramSharma

Computer Scienceand Engineering

8 Mr. Aman AhmadAnsari

Privacy and security Dr. PoonamGera, Dr. BharaviMishra

Computer Scienceand Engineering

9 Mr. Nirmal Kumar S Exo-SIR: An Epidemiological Modelto Quantify the ExogenousInformation Diffusion and itsApplication to Detect Events

Dr. Sakthi Balan Computer Scienceand Engineering

Page | 64

10 Mr. Kum ShubhLakshmi Agrwal

Image Processing Dr. Vibhor Kant Computer Scienceand Engineering

11 Ms. Neha Kumari Software Defined Networking Dr. JayaprakashKar

Computer Scienceand Engineering

12 Mr. Manish KumarSharma

Software Defined NetworkingMachine Learning, Multiflex & MultiLevel classification

Dr. SudheerKumar Sharma

Computer Scienceand Engineering

13 Ms. Nainsi Soni Internet of Things Dr. SaurabhKumar

Computer Scienceand Engineering

14 Ms. ParulKhandelwal

Social Network Analysis Dr. Preety Singh Computer Scienceand Engineering

15 Mr. Ram Ji Das Hyperspectral Image Processing,Deep Learning

Dr. Aloke Datta Computer Scienceand Engineering

16 Ms. Shrusti Porwal Video Analysis Dr. Preety Singh Computer Scienceand Engineering

17 Mr. Bhuvnesh Malik Security and Privacy Issues inMobile Devices

Dr. ShwetaBhandari

Computer Scienceand Engineering

18 Mr. Atul KumarGupta

Machine Learning through DeepLearning

Dr. ShwetaBhandari

Computer Scienceand Engineering

19 Mr. Dipesh Vaya Security and Cryptography Dr. SubratKumar Dash

Computer Scienceand Engineering

20 Mr. Raj BahadurSingh

Medical Image Processing,Computer Vision, Deep Learning

Dr. Aloke Datta Computer Scienceand Engineering

21 Ms. Monika Jain Cognitive Radio, WirelessCommunication

Prof. R.Gangopadhyay,Dr. DivyangRawal

Electronics &CommunicationEngineering

22 Mr. Aditya SinghSengar

Wireless Communication Dr. SoumitraDebnath, Prof. R.Gangopadhyay

Electronics &CommunicationEngineering

23 Mr. Rahul KumarGarg

Microstrip Antenna Prof. R. Tomer,Dr. Deepak Nair

Electronics &CommunicationEngineering

24 Ms. Surbhi Chhabra Hardware Security Dr. Kusum Lata Electronics &CommunicationEngineering

25 Mr. Rahul Makkar Wireless Communication Dr. DivyangRawal

Electronics &CommunicationEngineering

26 Ms. Monika Jain Wireless Communication,Underwater Visible LightCommunication

Dr. NikhilSharma, Dr.Divyang Rawal

Electronics &CommunicationEngineering

27 Ms. Sandhya Soni Wireless Communication Dr. DivyangRawal, Dr. NikhilSharma

Electronics &CommunicationEngineering

28 Ms. Shweta Saboo Digital Image Processing Dr. JoyeetaSingha

Electronics &CommunicationEngineering

29 Mr. Abdul NaimKhan

Modeling and Simulation of HighElectron Mobility Transistor andMOS-HEMT

Dr. Kanja LochanJena, Dr. GauravChatterjee

Electronics &CommunicationEngineering

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30 Ms. Mohita Jaiswal Computer vision, Embeddedsystems

Dr. AbhishekSharma

Electronics &CommunicationEngineering

31 Mr. BhupendraSharma

Wireless Communication Dr. SoumitraDebnath, Dr.AnirudhAgarwal

Electronics &CommunicationEngineering

32 Ms. Payal Mittal Wireless Communication Dr. Santosh Shah Electronics &CommunicationEngineering

33 Ms. Vaidehi Sharma Computer vision, EmbeddedSystems

Dr. AbhishekSharma

Electronics &CommunicationEngineering

34 Mr. Manoj KumarSain

Digital Image Processing Dr. JoyeetaSingha

Electronics &CommunicationEngineering

35 Mr. Rahul Porwal Antennas Dr. Deepak Nair,Dr. Nikhil Raj

Electronics &CommunicationEngineering

36 Ms. Sneha KumariDattatreya

Advanced Sensing Technology Dr. GauravChatterjee, Dr.Kanjlochan Jena

Electronics &CommunicationEngineering

37 Mr. Ajeet KumarRathor

Antennas Dr. Deepak Nair Electronics &CommunicationEngineering

38 Ms. AsthaDadheech

VLSI and Communication Dr. Nikhil Raj Electronics &CommunicationEngineering

39 Ms. MeenakshiChauhan

Nanotechnology Dr. KanjalochanJena

Electronics &CommunicationEngineering

40 Mr. DhirajShrivastava

Measurement and Control Dr. BharatVerma

Electronics &CommunicationEngineering

41 Mr. Prashant Singh Hardware Security Dr. Kusum Lata Electronics &CommunicationEngineering

42 Ms. SameekshaChaudhary

Wireless Communication Dr. AniruddhaAgarwal

Electronics &CommunicationEngineering

43 Mr. NarendraKhatri

Smart Monitoring and Control forEnergy Independent WastewaterTreatment Plant

Dr. K.K. Khatri,Dr. AbhishekSharma

Mechanical andMechatronicsEngineering

44 Mr. SurendraDeochand Barewar

Jet Impingement on HorizontalSurfaces using Nanofluids andStructured Surfaces

Dr. Sandesh S.Chougule

Mechanical andMechatronicsEngineering

45 Mr. Harane PravinPandit

Investigation on Hole DrillingCapabilities of Electric DischargeMachining Process

Dr. Deepak R.Unune, Dr.Sandesh SChougule

Mechanical andMechatronicsEngineering

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46 Mr. Sharma PravinOmprakash

Pool boiling heat transferenhancement

Dr. DeepakUnune

Mechanical andMechatronicsEngineering

47 Akshat SrivastavaKulshrestha

Optimization and Characterizationof Process Parameter for ElectricDischarge face Grinding.

Dr. DeepakRajendra Unune,Dr. Ashok Dargar

Mechanical andMechatronicsEngineering

48 Mr. Mandeep Singh Optimization of performance andemission characteristics of a dualfuel CI engine with micro-algalbiodiesel and biogas.

Dr. KamalKishore Khatri,Dr. Ashok KumarDargar

Mechanical andMechatronicsEngineering

49 Mr. Ritesh Shrimali Design & Development of advancedrobotic GMAW/ open arc weldingprocess for metallic 3D printing

Dr. Manoj Kumar Mechanical andMechatronicsEngineering

50 Mr. Shiv PrakashDadhich

Alternative solid fuel based onagriculture Biomass.

Dr. KamalKishore Khatri,Dr. MohitMakkar

Mechanical andMechatronicsEngineering

51 Mr. Amber Batwara Industrial engineering Dr. VikramSharma

Mechanical andMechatronicsEngineering

52 Mr. Ayush KumarSingh

Manufacturing Dr. Manoj Kumar Mechanical andMechatronicsEngineering

53 Mr. Chavan VijaySingh Mohanrao

Manufacturing Dr. DeepakUnune

Mechanical andMechatronicsEngineering

54 Mr. RajnishMaithani

Thermal Engineering Dr. K K Khatri Mechanical andMechatronicsEngineering

55 Mr. Pawan KumarSharma

Experimental Material Science /Third Generation Solar Cells

Dr. ManishKumar Singh.Prof. G.D.Sharma

Physics

56 Mr. Gaurav Gupta Third Generation Solar Cells Dr. SubhayanBiswas, Prof.G.D. Sharma

Physics

57 Mr. PrateekMalhotra

Third Generation Solar Cells Prof. G.D.Sharma, Dr.SubhayanBiswas

Physics

58 Mr. Devesh PratapSingh

Neutrino Physics Dr. PomitaGhoshal, Dr.Anjishnu Sarkar

Physics

59 Ms. KanupriyaKhandelwal

Third Generation Solar Cells Prof. G.D.Sharma, Dr.SubhayanBiswas

Physics

60 Mr. Hemraj Dahiya Organic Solar Cell Prof. G.D.Sharma, Dr.Manish KumarSingh

Physics

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61 Mr. Shyam ShankarS

Materials Science, Organic and DyeSensitized Solar Cells

Prof. G.D.Sharma, Prof.Somnath Biswas

Physics

62 Mr. Vishnukant Development of organic solar cellsusing inverted structures

Prof. G.D.Sharma, Dr.Manish KumarSingh

Physics

63 Ms. Parul Kedia Solar Cell Dr. SubhayanBiswas

Physics

64 Mr. AnuruddhaMishra

Material Science / Solid Oxide FuelCell

Dr. SomnathBiswas

Physics

65 Ms. Suman Nehra Material science Dr. SomnathBiswas

Physics

66 Mr. Dharminder Cryptography Dr. DheerendraMishra

Mathematics

67 Mr. Saurabh Rana Cryptography Dr. DheerendraMishra

Mathematics

68 Ms. Nibedita Kundu Cryptography, Cryptology andNetwork Security

Dr. DheerendraMishra

Mathematics

69 Mr. Sanjay KuSahoo

Singularly perturbed problems Dr. Vikas Gupta Mathematics

70 Mr. PrashantKumar

Completeness properties of functionspaces

Dr. PratibhaGarg

Mathematics

71 Ms. Kezia Saini Boolean Function and itsCryptographic Properties

Dr. Manish Garg Mathematics

72 Ms. RavinaShokeen

Finite Element Method Dr. Ajit Patel Mathematics

73 Mr. Saurabh Kumar Fractional Partial DifferentialEquation

Dr. Vikas Gupta Mathematics

74 Mr. UddeshayaKumar

Cryptography Dr. Manish Garg Mathematics

75 Mr. Azad Rohilla Operator Theory Dr. Harsh C.Trivedi

Mathematics

76 Ms. Dimple Functional Analysis Dr. Harsh C.Trivedi

Mathematics

77 Mr. Avinash KumarDubey

TBA Dr. Ajit Patel Mathematics

78 Mr. Meena SanjayBabulal

Stochastic Processes Dr. Sunil KumarGauttam

Mathematics

79 Mr. Ranjit Kumar TBA Dr. Ajit Patel Mathematics

80 Mr. Ajay Kumar Fractional Differential Equation Dr. Vikas Gupta Mathematics

81 Mr. Deepak Singh computational finance Dr. Vikas Gupta Mathematics

82 Ms. Shobha Mangal computational finance Dr. Vikas Gupta Mathematics

83 Mr. Ram KumarDhaka

Algebraic Topology Dr. PratibhaGarg

Mathematics

84 Mr. Umesh Singh Finite Element Methods Dr. SudiptoChowdhury

Mathematics

85 Mr. Ajay Kumawat Topology Dr. PratibhaGarg

Mathematics

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86 Mr. Akash Panwar Fractional Differential Equations Dr. Vikas Gupta Mathematics

87 Mr. Anil Kumar Finite Element Method and OptimalControl Problem

Dr. SudiptoChowdhury

Mathematics

88 Mr. GautamKaushik

Algebraic Number Theory forValuation Method

Dr. Neeraj Mathematics

89 Mr. RageshwariMunderia

Cyber Psychology, Psychology ofTechnology

Dr. Rajbala Singh Humanities andSocial Sciences

90 Ms. Chanchal Singh A study on Workplace Spirituality,Psychological Empowerment, Trust,Organizational Citizenship Behaviorand Subjective Well-Being in IndianOrganizations

Dr. Rajbala Singh Humanities andSocial Sciences

91 Ms. Jasrah Farooq English Literature Dr. NarendraKumar

Humanities andSocial Sciences

92 Ms. Atteqa Ansari Psychology Dr. Anu Malik(Supervisor) &Dr Rajbala Singh(Co-supervisor)

Humanities andSocial Sciences

93 Ms. Promiti DuttaChoudhury

Applied Linguistics Dr. UshaKanoongo

Humanities andSocial Sciences

94 Mr. Melvin Vincent Economics Dr. SagnikBagchi(Supervisor) &Dr. SurinderNehra(Co-supervisor)

Humanities andSocial Sciences

95 Ms. Shreya Sharma Literature Dr. Payel Pal Humanities andSocial Sciences

3.4. Administrative Staff And Other Staff

Non Teaching Staff (Regular)

Dr. Renu BapnaRegistrarAdministration

CA. Ashok Kumar SalechaFinance OfficerFinance

Ranjan KumarPurchase OfficerPurchase

Dr. Chand Singh PanwarSenior Medical OfficerMedical

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Dr. Raghuveer Singh CharanAsst. Sports OfficerSports

Manish TyagiJunior Civil EngineerEstate Office

Girdhar KunkurLibrarian (On-Contract)Library

Dr. Shweta PandeyAssistant LibrarianCentral Library

Manuj SharmaTraining & Placement OfficerTraining & Placement Cell

Ajeet Singh RawatAssistant Registrar - E & EAdministration

Rajeev SaxenaAssistant Registrar-AcademicsAcademics

Samar SinghAsst. Registrar-Students ServicesAdministration

Suni ThomasPS to the DirectorDirectorate

Ram Swaroop SharmaSr. Office SuperintendentAdministration

Arvind Kumar GaurOffice SuperintendentAcademics

Devaram S. RabariFinance AssistantFinance/Accounts

Giriraj SharmaFinance AssistantFinance

Govind ChandwaniPurchase and Store ManagerStore

Mukesh Kumar SharmaSystem-AdministratorIT-LUCS

Mansimaran SawhneyJr. Officer (Alumni Service)Administration

Ashish BhardwajJr. Training & Placement OfficerTraining & Placement Cell

Rajendra Kumar BairwaJr. Office SuperintendentAdministration

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Ashish SharmaJr. Office SuperintendentAdministration

Deen Dayal SainJr. Office SuperintendentAdministration

Suraj Bhan SharmaJr. AccountantFinance

Praveen Kumar TripathiJr. AccountantFinance

Nahar SinghMale NurseMedical

Pushpa DeviStaff NurseMedical

Raj Singh SolankiLibrary Information AssistantCentral Library

Parwez Ahmad AnsariLibrary Information AssistantCentral Library

Vishnu Kumar JabdoliyaJr. Assistant (Admin)Administration

Ghanshyam SharmaJr. Hostel SuperintendentHostel

Namo Narayan MeenaJr. Hostel SuperintendentHostel

Ram Kumar SinghCaretakerHostel

Virendra Kumar MudgalCaretakerHostel

Pankesh SharmaCaretakerHostel

Prahlad SharmaCaretakerHostel

Sakshi SharmaCaretakerHostel

Non Teaching Staff (Contractual through Institute)

Name Designation Department/ Section

Banwari Lal Sharma Jr. Electrical Engineer Project and Maintenance

Chandan Rai Technician LUCS

Ramkishor Bunker Driver Administration

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Vijay Kumar Yadav Driver Administration

Durga Prasad Fitter Estate Management Office

Pradeep Kumar Buhadiya Fitter Estate Management Office

Hemraj Bairwa Electrician Estate Management Office

Hanuman Sahay Meena Plumber Estate Management Office

Sitaram Raiger Fitter Estate Management Office

Yadram Bunker Electrician Estate Management Office

Kamlesh Saini Electrician Estate Management Office

Shrawan Kumar Electrician Estate Management Office

Arjun Lal Raiger Mason Estate Management Office

Jitendra Singh Store Helper Project and Maintenance Department

Moti Lal Meena Plumber Estate Management Office

Raghuveer Prasad Meena MTS Finance

Praveen Kumar Jha Caretaker - Boys Hostel Hostel

Kajor Meena Caretaker - Boys Hostel Hostel

Rakesh Kumar Gawaria System Technical Assistant LUCS

Om Prakash Ratiwal System Technical Assistant LUCS

Suresh Chand Dhanka Caretaker - Boys Hostel Hostel

Manju Kanwar Caretaker - Girls Hostel Hostel

Neha Saini Library Trainee Central Library

Kamlesh Kumar Meena Caretaker - Boys Hostel Hostel

Mangi Lal Meena Plumber Project and Maintenance Department

Ajay Meena Carpenter Project and Maintenance Department

Madhu Yadav Jr. Lady Hostel Superintendent Hostel

Parminder Kaur Assistant Library Central Library

Lal Chand Jr. Office Superintendent Academic

Vijay Kumar Library Information Assistant Central Library

Chhitar Mal Prajapat Staff Nurse Medical

Dinesh Kumar Sharma Jr. Technical Superintendent CSE

Mukesh Kumar Bhardwaj Junior Assistant Administration

Rahul Sharma Caretaker - Boys Hostel Hostel

Abhishek Jain Junior Assistant CSE and Mathematics

Krishan Kant Chawala Junior Assistant Examination & Establishment

Indraraj Sharma Junior Assistant Purchase Department

Kundan Singh Shahi Junior Assistant Physics and ECE

Hostel Administration

Name Designation

Dr. Ajit Patel Chief Warden

Dr. Vikas Gupta Associate Chief Warden

Dr. Manish Garg Warden (Boys Hostel-1)

Dr. Bharvi Mishra Associate Warden (Boys Hostel-1)

Dr. Mohit Makkar Warden (Boys Hostel-2)

Dr. Navneet Upadhyay Associate Warden (Boys Hostel-2)

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Dr. Ashok Garai Warden (Boys Hostel-3)

Dr. Kanj Lochan Jena Associate Warden (Boys Hostel-3)

Dr. Nabyendu Das Warden (Boys Hostel-4)

Dr. Pomita Ghoshal Warden (Girls Hostel)

Dr. Joyeeta Singha Associate Warden (Girls Hostel)

Namo Narayan Meena Junior Hostel Superintendent (Boys Hostel)

Ghanshyam Sharma Junior Hostel Superintendent (Boys Hostel)

Madhu Yadav Junior Lady Hostel Superintendent (Girls Hostel)

Prahlad Sharma Caretaker (Boys Hostel)

Ram Kumar Singh Caretaker (Boys Hostel)

Kamlesh Kumar Meena Caretaker (Boys Hostel)

Praveen Kumar Jha Caretaker (Boys Hostel)

Suresh Chand Dhanka Caretaker (Boys Hostel)

Kajor Meena Caretaker (Boys Hostel)

Pankesh Sharma Caretaker (Girls Hostel)

Manju Kanwar Caretaker (Girls Hostel)

Sakshi Sharma Caretaker (Girls Hostel)

Rahul Sharma Caretaker (Boys Hostel)

Department-wise Strength of Non-Teaching Staff (Regular)

Sr. No. Division Strength

1 Academic 2

2 Account 1

3 Administration 9

4 Central Library 4

5 Directorate 1

6 Estate Office 1

7 Finance 4

8 Hostel 7

9 IT 1

10 Medical 3

11 Purchase 1

12 Sports 1

13 Store 1

14 TPC 2

15 Technical Staff (Lab) 15

Total 53

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Sr. No. Department Strength

1 Academic 1

3 Administration 3

4 Central Library 3

5 CSE 1

6 CSE and Mathematics 1

Physics and ECE 1

7 Estate Management Office 10

8 Examination & Establishment 1

9 Finance 1

10 Hostel 7

11 LUCS 3

12 Medical 1

13 Project and Maintenance 4

14 Purchase 1

Total 38

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3.5. Institutional Welfare SupportFaculty Welfare SupportCareer Advancement Scheme For FacultyThere are two channels for promotion for the faculty members:

1. Open Channela. Faculty members seeking promotion may apply to the institute against advertisement for

faculty recruitment.b. Faculty members who are in probation period are not eligible to apply for promotion till they

complete the probation period.c. The eligibility criteria for applicants is broadly the same for both channels. The eligibility rules

ared. same across all departments and are subject to GC approval.e. The faculty member called for the interview faces the selection committee in the presence of

external experts, in competition with the outside applicants.f. Director takes the final decision based on the recommendation of the selection committee.

However, all full-time regular appointments are made only after approval of the Chairman (orActing Chairman) of the Governing Council.

2. CAS ChannelCareer Advancement Scheme (CAS) is operational in the institute. The major objective of CAS is to providepromotional avenues to the serving regular faculty for elevation to the next higher-level academicposition (e.g., Associate Professor/Professor), subject to having performed satisfactorily, in expectedareas of operation (teaching, research and institutional contribution).

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The CAS based internal promotion scheme has been instituted at LNMIIT to specifically provide thedeserving and eligible internal faculty member a better scope of service recognition who are either morefocused towards research or more inclined to teaching and administration or any two of these withoutfacing competition with the outside applicants as in “Open Channel” selection process.

a. At the end of a four year period and every two years thereafter within a given rank (sayAssistant Professor), CAS may be considered as an internal, data-driven process where apre-populated data filled by the IDAAR Cell and verified by Establishment Section, FinanceOfficer, Dean of Academic Affairs, Dean of Research and Consultancy, QATC Chairman andHead of the department for respective sections, a proposal is initiated by the office of DoFAwhereby, if a faculty so prefers to be considered instead of Open Channel within atwelve-month period, names of three expert reviewers are chosen by the institute such thatone name of external expert is taken from the faculty member and two other names ofexternal experts are nominated by the director in a standard format, observations andrecommendations are sought from the experts within a period of two months and dependingupon the majority recommendations and own observation of the director, an appropriatedecision about career advancement is taken and communicated to the faculty member. Noneof these experts should be a present or past collaborator of the faculty member, his/her guide,relative or junior in terms of cadre or belong to an Institution lower than the level of theinstitute.

b. If for any reason through this process, no promotion is recommended, at the expiry of twelve-months from the date of the original process, a faculty member may request another CASreview or might choose to apply through an open channel but not both.

c. In case a faculty member applies through an Open Channel, the department provides itsfeedback based on his/her teaching presentation in the department and also provides anyother useful input to the shortlisting committee. If the basic eligibility criteria are met, thedepartment does not stop the candidate from being considered for the final interview roundinvolving external panel members. This is to ensure that no internal bias affects the servicecandidate’s career advancement process.

d. In case any information is found to be incorrect or knowingly mis-informed/held back, at anypoint in time, an appropriate action will be initiated and any benefits may be withdrawn ifprovided based on incomplete or incorrect information.

In all cases, the director's recommendation would be submitted to the chairman or acting chairman - GCand only after his/her approval, an appropriate office order would be issued through the registrar's officein consultation with the finance officer.

Incentive Scheme To Faculty(For Quality Research, Outstanding Teaching & Select Institutional Responsibilities)Although every faculty joining the institute is expected to teach well, carry out good research andmeaningfully participate in various academic or administrative functions of the institute, following revisednorms are in place for incentivizing those who make significant contributions.

1. An amount of Rs. 1 lakh is added to Annual Research Grant of a faculty if he/she publishes 02 (ormore) Tier-1 (or equivalent) journal papers and brings externally funded research, development,industry or consultancy projects of significant value, preferably as PI or Co-PI.

2. In order to promote sponsored research and to seek funding from national/international agencies,out of the overhead charge of 15% chargeable by the institute, where applicable, the projectinvestigator can retain 60% of this over-head charges for his/her professional development, whichcan be used also for travel to attend conferences etc. This is distributed equally in case of more thanone project investigator (PI).

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3. In case of consultancy projects (industrial or otherwise) and earnings not exceeding Rs. 3 lakh peryear, the faculty concerned can keep 70% of these earnings subject to income tax and the timedevoted for such consultancy does not involve more than 10 hours per week and does not in anymanner jeopardize the academic/administrative commitments of the institute.

4. Any faculty getting a notable national award/honor for scientific achievements, like SSB prize or twofellowships of the national/international academies based on the research work done at the LNMIITJaipur, gets an additional amount of Rs.15,000/- per month in addition to his/her salary. However, allsuch cases are first reported with supporting documents to the GC in a GC Meeting and GC takes adecision in this respect, once presented to it by the director.

5. Financial support for attending and presenting research papers at national/international conferencesis given by the institute. A grant of Rs. 3 lakhs is given for a period of three years’ subject to amaximum of 1.50 lakh per year and subject to favorable recommendations by the QARC (or anyresearch-specific Quality Assurance body that might replace QARC in later years) and final decision bythe director. If the conference is of a good standard, preferably Tier-1/2 or equivalent, and theresearch paper is accepted for presentation after peer review and there are no strong negativecomments by the reviewers, normally it leads to a positive recommendation for financial supportfrom research grants of the faculty. This clause is not normally applicable to faculty in the first year ofhis/her joining the institute. However, the institute may relax this condition depending upon the meritof the case.

6. The Wardens, the Chief Warden/Associate Chief Warden, Deans/Associate Deans/Assistant Deansand the HoDs are compensated to the extent of an additional honorarium of INR 2000/- p.m. DeputyHoDs, Centre Leads, Leads/Co-Leads of officially designated cells like IDAAR Cell andFaculty-in-Charge(s) of any officially designated term-based function like Faculty-in-Charge -Community Welfare and Counseling, if appointed, are also compensated with an additionalhonorarium of INR 1000/- p.m.

7. Additional honorarium for other designated positions like those applicable to the PCC Chairman, ifstated through any in-force circular issued before July 2017, are either made to be increased to INR1000/- p.m. or remain unchanged if more than this amount, unless otherwise stated.

8. When available, chief warden, associate chief warden and hostel/mess warden get high priority in oncampus or near-campus house/accommodation allocation due to the nature of their work. However, ifsomeone accepts this responsibility for a short period, such a priority would not apply. Ditto appliesto distinguished/research/industry/emeritus professors who plan to stay for at least a year or moreon campus.

Note - No faculty draws more than one incentive in a particular calendar year.

Staff Welfare SupportThe institution has a performance appraisal system, promotional avenues and effective welfare measures forNon-teaching Staff. Institute has a very transparent appraisal system involving self-appraisal and peerreview done annually through specific committees constituted by the Director. The annual appraisalbecomes the basis of annual increments and any linked performance incentives.

Promotion AvenuesPromotions under the open channel of selection as well as under the Career Advancement Scheme (CAS) areavailable.

Welfare MeasuresFollowing welfare measures are available for staff

● Medical Insurance from a leading Insurance company for all employees and their dependents● Mobile Reimbursement and Dongle/data card for internet access● Maternity Benefit as per Maternity Act and Paternity benefits● Study Leave, Sabbatical Leave, academic leave for professional growth.

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● Retirement Benefits - Provident Fund and Gratuity● Leave encashment● Reimbursement of Dislocation charges at the time of joining and leaving

Incentive SchemeThe Institute has incentive schemes to recognise the outstanding contribution of employees. Theself-nominations with due recommendations of the reporting and reviewing officers are submitted toDirector with full justification/evidence whatsoever, by a fixed date as announced by the Institute Onrecommendation of the duly constituted Committee the competent authority awards the selected staffmember(s) with a Shawl, Shreephal, a commendation certificate signed by the Director/Registrar and cashaward to the tune of INR 5000/- as a token of appreciation for outstanding exemplary and dedicatedservices and cash award to the tune of INR 3000/- as a token of appreciation for commendable exemplaryand dedicated services rendered to the Institute. The awards are announced and conferred on FoundationDay of LNMIIT every year. On 19th Foundation Day celebrated on 14th September 2021, 18 regular staffmembers were awarded under outstanding, and 5 staff members were awarded under commendableservices.

In addition, on the recommendations of the Deans Committee, Director felicitates the selective officers fortheir outstanding performance with a Shawl, Shreephal, a commendation certificate signed by theDirector/Registrar and cash award to the tune of INR 9000/- as a token of appreciation. On 19th FoundationDay, 5 officers were awarded under this category. The complete list of awardees is Annexed.

LIST OF AWARDEES

19th Foundation Day – 2021

Non-Teaching Staff for Outstanding and Commendable services

OFFICERS

1. Dr. Renu Bapna Registrar Administration

2. CA Ashok KumarSalecha

Finance Officer Accounts and Finance

3. Dr. Chand SinghPanwar

RMO Medical

4. Mr. Manuj Sharma Training and Placement Office Training and Placement Officer

5. Dr. Shweta Pandey Assistant Librarian Central Library

● CATEGORY -REGULAR, NTS

OUTSTANDING

Sr. No. Employee Name Designation Department

1. Ajeet Singh Rawat Assistant Registrar-E&E Examination and Establishment

2. Samar Singh Assistant Registrar-StudentsServices (Estate Officer-I/C)

Student Services and EstateOfficer – In-charge

3. Rajeev Saxena Assistant Registrar - Academics Academic

4. Ram Swaroop Sharma Sr. Office Superintendent Administration

5. Arvind Kumar Gaur Office Superintendent Academic

6. Nahar Singh Staff Nurse Medical

7. Raj Singh Solanki Library Information Assistant Central Library

8. Giriraj Sharma Finance Assistant Finance

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9. Mukesh Kumar Sharma System-Administrator LUCS

10. Deendayal Sain Jr. Office Superintendent Administration

11. Suraj Bhan Sharma Jr. Accountant Finance

12. Ashish Sharma Jr. Office Superintendent Administration

13. Namo Narayan Meena Jr. Hostel Superintendent Hostel

14. Vishnu Kumar Jabdoliya Jr. Assistant (Admin) Administration

15. Manish Kumar Mittal Jr. Technical Superintendent CSE

16. Shivangee Singh Jr. Technical Superintendent CSE

17. Satish Yadav Jr. Technical Superintendent MME

18. Ashish Bhardwaj Jr. TPO Training and Placement

19. Ram Kumar Singh Caretaker Hostel

20. Pushpa Devi Female Nurse Medical

COMMENDABLE

Sr. No. Employee Name Designation Department

1. Govind Chandwani Purchase and Store Manager Store

2. Virendra Kumar Mudgal Caretaker-Guest House Guest House

3. Ghanshyam Sharma Jr. Hostel Superintendent Hostel

4. Vinod Kumar Technical-Superintendent ECE

5. Kushamakar Sharma Jr. Technical Superintendent ECE

● CATEGORY - CONTRACTUAL NTS

OUTSTANDING

Sr. No. Employee Name Designation Department

1. Banwari Lal Sharma Jr. Electrical Engineer Estate Mgt Office

2. Vijay Kumar Yadav Driver Administration

3. Hanuman Sahay Meena Plumber Estate Mgt Office

4. Jitendra Singh Store Helper Estate Mgt Office

5. Lal Chand Jr. Office Superintendent Academics

6. Mukesh Kumar Bhardwaj Junior Assistant Student Services

7. Indraraj Sharma Junior Assistant Purchase Department

8. Kundan Singh Shahi Junior Assistant Physics and ECE

9. Abhishek Jain Junior Assistant CSE and Mathematics

10. Chhitarmal Prajapat Male Nurse Medical

11. Ram Kishore Bunkar Driver Medical

COMMENDABLE

Sr. No. Employee Name Designation Department

1. Hemraj Bairwa Electrician Estate Management Office

2. Sitaram Raiger Fitter Estate Management Office

3. Kamlesh Saini Electrician Estate Management Office

4. Moti Lal Meena Plumber Estate Management Office

5. Ajay Meena Carpenter Estate Management Office

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6. Madhu Yadav Jr. Lady Hostel Superintendent Hostel

7. Krishan Kant Chawla Junior Assistant Examination & Establishment

● APPRECIATION AWARD FOR SIGNIFICANT CONTRIBUTIONS IN OUT-SOURCED SERVICES

OUTSTANDING

Sr. No. Employee Name Department Designation

1. Shyam Sharma Estate Office Housekeeping Supervisor Part-A

2. Sohan Lal Estate Office Housekeeping Staff Part-C

3. Manni Yogi Estate Office Gardener

4. Raghuveer Gurjar-Ist Estate Office Helper Electric

5. Rahul Kumar Estate Office Welder (Fitter)

6. Suresh Chand Saini Estate Office Electrician

7. Deendayal Estate Office Helper

8. Ram Swaroop Estate Office Security Supervisor

9. Devi Singh Estate Office Security Guard

10. Chhotu Lal Meena Sports Ground Boy

11. Rajesh Meena Library Library Office Boy

12. Mainudeen Saikh Registrar Office Office Boy

COMMENDABLE

Sr. No. Employee Name Department Designation

1. Surajmal Gurjar Estate Office Housekeeping Supervisor Part-C

2. Badri Narayan Meena Estate Office Gardener

3. Udai Chand Sharma Estate Office Security Supervisor

4. Narpat Singh Solanki Director Office Helper

4. COMMITTEE4.1. Finance Committee

● There is a finance committee comprising such persons as members as may be decided by thegoverning council. The director of the institute is the ex-officio chairperson of the finance committee.

● The governing council provides in the bye-laws, to be framed by it, the procedure for the conduct ofbusiness of the finance committee, the powers and functions of the finance committee and the term ofthe office of its membership.

● The governing council delegates such powers and responsibilities to the finance committee as it maydeem desirable for effective functioning of the institute.

Finance Committee of Executive Board (FCEB)

Sr. No Category Duration Member

1 Director (Vice Chancellor) Ex-OfficioChairperson

Co terminus Prof. Rahul Banerjee

2 Deputy Director (Pro Vice Chancellor)(if any)

Ex- OfficioMember

Co terminus -

3 One person nominated by the LUMFoundation

NominatedMember

Three years Mr. Rajan Tandon

4-5 Two nominees of the Executive Board,one of whom shall be a member of theBoard

NominatedMembers

Three years Prof. Anupam Singh,PCC Chairman

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Prof. A P Singh

6 UGC Nominee NominatedMembers

Three years -

7 Finance Officer Ex- OfficioSecretary

Co terminus Mr. Ashok Salecha

4.2. Academic CouncilConsequent upon joining of new professors and nomination of new student members due to migration of fewstudent members on completion of a course, in partial modification to notification even number dated 24September 2021, the composition of the Academic Council is notified as under:

Sr. No. Category Nature ofMembership

Designations Members / Nominatedmember

1 Director(ViceChancellor)

Ex- Officio -Chairperson

Director (ViceChancellor)

Prof. Rahul Banerjee

2 All Deans Ex- OfficioMembers

DOAA Dr. Narendra Kumar

3 DoSRC Prof. G D Sharma

4 DoAR Prof. Somnath Biswas

5 DOFA Prof M. K. Kadalbajoo

6 DOSA Prof. Anupam Singh

7 DOAARG Prof. Manju Dhariwal

8 All Heads of theDepartment

Ex- OfficioMembers

HoD, CSE Dr. Preety Singh

9 HoD, ECE Prof. Raghuvir SinghTomar

10 HoD, MME Dr. Ashok Kumar Dargar

11 HoD, Physics Dr. Subhayan Biswas

12 HoD, Maths Dr. Pratibha Garg

13 HoD, HSS Dr. Usha Kanoongo

14 All Professors otherthan the head of thedepartments

Ex- OfficioMembers

Emeritus Professor, CSE Prof. Ravi Prakash Gorthi

Emeritus Professor, ECE Prof. Raghuvir SinghTomar

15 Research Professor, ECE Prof. R. Gangopadhyay

16 Distinguished Professor,Mathematics

Prof. M. K. Kadalbajoo

17 Professor, Physics Prof. Anupam Singh

18 Professor, Physics Prof. Somnath Biswas

19 Professor, HSS Prof. Manju Dhariwal

20 Two AssociateProfessors from thedepartments otherthan the Head of theDepartments byrotation of seniority

NominatedMembers

Associate Professor, CSE Dr. Sakthi Balan Muthiah

21 Associate Professor, MME Dr. Kamal Kishore Khatri

22 Two AssistantProfessors from thedepartments byrotation of seniority

NominatedMembers

Assistant Professor, ECE Dr. Santosh Shah

23 Assistant Professor, HSS Dr. Surinder Singh Nehra

24 Three persons fromamongst

NominatedMembers

Professor, Electrical Engg. Prof. Subrat Kar

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educationists ofrepute or personsfrom any other fieldrelated to theactivities of theinstitution Deemed tobe university who arenot in the service ofthe institutionDeemed to beuniversity, nominatedby the Director/ ViceChancellor

Professor, CSE, IIITHyderabad

Prof. PonnurangamKumaraguru25

26 Professor, CSE, IITKharagpur

Dr. Sudip Misra

27 Three persons whoare not members ofthe teaching staffco-opted by theAcademic Council fortheir specializedknowledge

NominatedMembers28

29

30 All Associate Deans Ex- OfficioMembers

Assoc. Dean Academic Dr. Narendra Kumar

31 Assoc. Dean Admission Dr. Subrat Kumar Dash

32 StudentRepresentative(01 — Ph. D., 01 PG &02 UG)

NominatedMembers

Student RepresentativePh. D

Rahul Makkar17PEC001

33 Student Representative Vaibhav Silmana

34 Student Representative Ashray Mittal

35 Student Representative Akshi Shah

36 Registrar Ex- OfficioMember

Secretary

Registrar Dr. Renu Bapna

Further, following Visiting Professors would be called for the meetings as invitees1. Prof. Phillip Miller, Visiting Professor, CSE2. Prof. C. Pandurangan, Visiting Professor, CSE

4.3. AC-SAC (Academic Council – Students' Affairs Committee)The AC-SAC is primarily concerned with ensuring that the Code of Conduct of Students (CCOS) is not violatedat any time, either by an individual student or a group of students. Any student, teacher, director, or any otherfunctionary of the institute can refer any violation of the CCOS to this committee. The AC-SAC investigates anyalleged misdemeanour and recommends a suitable course of action to the chairperson AC. The chairpersonAC may approve the recommendations for its implementation, or may ask the committee to reconsider itsrecommendations in view of the remarks made by the chairperson AC. The chairperson AC may also prefer toplace the recommendations of the AC-SAC before the AC for its consideration. Any recommendationsinvolving termination of the academic programme of a student on disciplinary considerations must be placedbefore the AC, prior to its implementation.

Dean of Students' Affairs Ex-Officio Chairperson

Chief Warden Ex-Officio Member

Dr. Nabyendu Das Member

Dr. Mohit Makkar Member

Dr. Manju Dhariwal Member

Two Student Representatives Members (Nominated by President, Student Gymkhana)

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Dr. Joyeeta Singha Co-opted Member as per the requirement

Prof. Mohan K Kadalbajoo Advisor to the Committee

4.4. AC-LAC (Academic Council – Library Advisory Committee)The primary function of the AC-LAC is to advise the AC and the director on policy matters pertaining to thecentral library of the institute.

The Scope of AC-LACAn institute’s library plays a significant role in teaching and learning. It’s main objective is to cater therequirements of the LNMIIT academic fraternity and to enhance teaching, learning, research for academicexcellence. For smooth functioning of the library and keeping the interest and growth of the institute in mind,policies, rules & regulations are formed and implemented from time to time.

Library is advised by a Library Advisory Committee (LAC) with the following constitution to meet itsobjectives.

Sr. No. Category Nominations

1 Chairman Dr. Ashok Dargar Chairman

2 Nominee of CSE Department Dr. Vibhor Kant Member

3 Nominee of ECE Department Dr. Nikhil Raj Member

4 Nominee of Maths Department Dr. Pratibha Garg Member

5 Nominee of Physics Department Dr. Manish Kumar Singh Member

6 Nominee of HSS Department Dr. Sagnik Bagchi Member

7 Assistant Librarian Dr. Shweta Pandey Convener

4.5. Board of Studies (BoS)The Board of Studies (BoS) in accordance with UGC ‘Institutions Deemed to be University Regulations 2016’is constituted as a principal academic body at the departmental level and subject to the provision of the rules,run by the departments. The recommendations of the Board of Studies are considered by the AcademicAffairs Committee of Academic Council (AAC-AC) for ensuring consistency and coherence across departmentsand are submitted to the Academic Council for approval and subsequent notification. However, matters suchas common aspects of curricular structure like institute-wide provisions across disciplines are guided by theAcademic-Affairs Committee (AAC-AC) that are, in turn, reported to the Academic Council. The BoSrecommendations are sent to the AAC for further review and consequent recommendation for approval of theAcademic Council.

Board of Studies (BoS) of Respective Departments

Computer Science and Engineering (CSE)

Sr. No. Category Nature ofMembership

Ex-officio Members /Nominated member

1 Head of the respective Department Ex-officioChairperson

Dr. Preety Singh

2 All Professors of the Department Ex-officio Prof. Ravi Prakash Gorthi

3 Two Associate Professors nominatedby theDepartment (By rotation ofseniority)

NominatedMembers

Dr. Jaya Prakash Kar

4 Dr. Sakthi Balan

5 Two Assistant Professors of theDepartment (By rotation ofseniority)

NominatedMembers

Dr. Sunil Kumar

6 Dr. Shweta Bhandari

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7 One student pursuing DoctoralStudies in the Department

NominatedMember

Mr. Manish Kumar Sharma(19PCS001)

8 One Student pursuing Post GraduateStudies in the Department

NominatedMember

Ms. Tejaswita Atal (21MCS005)

9 Two students pursuingUndergraduate Studies in theDepartment

NominatedMembers

Mr. Parth Patel (18UCS015)

10 Ms. Pooja Singhal (18UCS072)

11 One Expert belonging to the area ofthe Study (External Member)

NominatedMembers

Prof. Deepak Khemani,Department of ComputerScience and EngineeringIIT Mandi, Himachal Pradesh

12 Not more than two persons to beCo-opted as academic and / orprofessional expert belonging to theeducational institutions/industry/R&D organizationsworking in the area of the study

Dr. Sriram Rajamani,MD, Microsoft Research,“Vigyan”, #9, Lavelle Road,Bangalore - [email protected]

Electronics and Communication Engineering (ECE)

Sr. No. Category Nature ofMembership

Ex-officio Members /Nominated member

1 Head of the respective Department Ex-officioChairperson

Professor Raghuvir Tomar

2 All Professors/ResearchProf./EmeritusProf./Distinguished/Professors inthe Department

Nominatedmember

Professor Ranjan Gangopadhyay

3 Two Associate Professorsnominated by theDepartment (By rotation ofseniority)

NominatedMembers

Dr. Soumira Debnath

4 Dr. Kusum Lata

5 Two Assistant Professors of theDepartment (By rotation ofseniority)

NominatedMembers

Dr. M.V. Deepak Nair

6 Dr. Sandeep Saini

7 One student pursuing DoctoralStudies in the Department

NominatedMember

Rahul Kumar Garg (16PEC001)

8 One Student pursuing M.Tech./M.S.Studies in the Department

NominatedMember

Monika Verma (19MEC001)

9 Two students pursuingUndergraduate Studies in theDepartment

NominatedMembers

Avish Jain (17UEC031)

10 Charu Lathi (18UEC180)

11 One Expert belonging to the area ofthe Study (External Member)

NominatedMembers

Professor Santanu Chaudhary,Director, IIT [email protected]

12 Not more than two persons to beCo-opted as academic and / orprofessional expert belonging tothe educational institutions/

NominatedMembers

Mr. Naresh GuptaVice PresidentSamsung Research Institute,Noida,

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industry/R&D organizationsworking in the area of the study

[email protected]

13 Professor Monojit Mitra,Indian institute of EngineeringScience and Technology, [email protected]

14 One expert belonging to the area ofstudy (External Member)

InvitedMembers

Professor Vineet SahulaMNIT, [email protected]

15 Co-opted Members Deputy HoD,ECE

Dr. Divyang Rawal

16 Invitees HoD, CSE Dr. Preety Singh

17 Deputy HoD,CSE

Dr. Rajbir Kaur

Mechanical-Mechatronics Engineering (MME)

Sr. No. Category Nature ofMembership

Ex-officio Members /Nominated member

1 Head of the respective Department Ex-officioChairperson

Dr. Ashok Kumar Dargar

2 Two Associate Professors of theDepartment (By rotation ofseniority)

Nominatedmember

Dr. Manoj Kumar

3 Dr. Vikram Sharma

4 Two Assistant Professors of theDepartment (By rotation ofseniority)

Nominatedmember

Dr. Mohit Makkar

5 Dr. Sandesh S. Chougule

6 One Student pursuing DoctoralStudies in the Department .

Nominatedmember

Mr. Mandeep Singh (18PMM003)

7 Two Students pursuing UnderGraduate Studies in theDepartment.

Nominatedmember

Mr. Manas Vyas (18UME037)

8 Ms. Vaishnavi (17UME063)

9 One Expert belonging to the areaof the study (External Member)

Nominatedmember

Prof. Sameer KhandekarDepartment of MechanicalEngineeringIndian Institute of Technology,Kanpur - 208016,samkhan @iitk.ac.in

10 Not more than two persons to beco-opted as academic and / orprofessional experts belonging tothe educational institutions /industry / R&D organizationsworking in the area of the study

Nominatedmember

Dr. R.K. Mittal, Former Senior

11 Nominatedmember

Sangram Powar Director,Ideametrics Pvt Ltd,

12 Co-opted Member Co-optedMember

Dr. K K Khatri

13 Invitee Permanent Dr. Deepak R Unune

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Physics

Sr. No. Category Nature ofMembership

Ex-officio Members /Nominated member

1 Head of the respective Department(Chairperson)

Ex-officio Dr. Subhayan Biswas

2 All Professors of the Department Ex-officio Prof. Ganesh Dutt Sharma

3 Prof. Anupam Singh

4 Prof.Somnath Biswas

5 Two Associate Professors nominated bythe Department (By rotation of seniority)

NominatedMembers

Dr. Subhayan Biswas

6 Two Assistant Professors of theDepartment (By rotation of seniority)

NominatedMembers

Dr. Anjishnu Sarkar

7 Dr. Pomita Ghoshal

8 One Student pursuing Doctoral Studies inthe Department

NominatedMembers

Mr. Pawan Kumar Sharma,(17PPH001)

9 One Student pursuing PostgraduateStudies in the Department

NominatedMembers

Mr. Anurag Dixit(17MPH501)

10 One expert belonging to the area of study(External Member)

NominatedMembers

Dr. Raghavan RangarajanProfessorTheoretical Physics DivisionPhysical ResearchLaboratory, Navrangpura,Ahamedabad

11 Not more than two persons to be co-optedas academic and / or professional expertbelonging to the educational institutions/industry/R&D organizations working inthe area of the study

Dr. V RavishankarDepartment of PhysicsIIT, New Delhi - 110016

Mathematics

Sr. No. Category Nature ofMembership

Ex-officio Members /Nominated member

1 Head of the respective department(chairperson)

Ex-officio,Chairperson

Dr. Pratibha Garg

2 All Professors of the department Ex-officio,Member

Prof. Mohan KrishenKadalbajoo

3 Two Associate Professors nominated bytheDepartment (by rotation of seniority)

NominatedMembers

Dr. Ajit Patel

4 Dr. Vikas Gupta

5 Two Assistant Professors of theDepartment (By rotation of seniority)

NominatedMembers

Dr. Harsh ChandrakantTrivedi

6 Dr. Sunil Kumar Gauttam

7 One student pursuing Doctoral Studiesin the Department

NominatedMember

Mr. Sanjay Sahoo(16PMT003)

8 One student is pursuing Post GraduateStudies in the Department.

NominatedMember

Mr. Akash Panwar(19MMT001)

9 One Expert belonging to the area of thestudy (External)

Invitedmember

Prof A.K. Pani, IIT, Bombay

10 Not more than two persons to be co-opted as academic and / or professional

NominatedMember

Prof. Debasis Kundu, IIT,Kanpur

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experts belonging to the educationalinstitutions./ industry/R&Dorganizations working in the area of thestudy

11 NominatedMember

Prof. Satya Deo, HRIAllahabad

Humanities and Social Sciences (HSS)

Sr. No. Category Nature ofMembership

Ex-officio Members /Nominated member

1 Head of the respective Department(Chairperson)

Ex Officio Dr. Usha Kanoongo

2 All Professors of the Department Ex Officio Prof. Manju Dhariwal

3 Two Associate Professors nominated bythe Department (By rotation of seniority)

NominatedMembers

Dr. Narendra Kumar

4 Dr. Rajbala Singh

5 Two Assistant Professors of theDepartment (By rotation of seniority)

NominatedMembers

Dr. Payel Pal

6 Dr. Sagnik Bagchi

7 One student pursuing Doctoral Studies inthe Department

NominatedMember

Ms. Chanchal Singh

8 One expert belonging to the area of theStudy (External member)

NominatedMember

Prof. Binod MishraProfessor of EnglishDept. of Humanities & SocialSciences IIT Roorkee,Email:[email protected] no. 9410328125

9 Not more than two persons to be co-optedas academic and / or professional expertbelonging to the educational institutions/industry/R&D organizations working inthe area of the study

NominatedMembers

Prof Samantak DasProfessor of ComparativeLiteratureDirector, School of CulturalTexts & RecordsJadavpur University, KolkataEmail: [email protected] no. 09434212841

10 NominatedMembers

Prof Dibyendu MaitiProfessorDepartment of EconomicsDelhi School of Economics,New DelhiEmail:[email protected] no. 9717783966

4.6. Quality Assurance CommitteesIQAC (Internal Quality Assurance Cell)The primary aim of IQAC is the following:

● To develop a system for conscious, consistent and catalytic action to improve the academic andadministrative performance of the institution.

● To promote measures for institutional functioning towards quality enhancement throughinternalization of quality culture and institutionalization of best practices.

Strategies - IQAC evolves mechanisms and procedures for the following:● Ensuring timely, efficient and progressive performance of academic, administrative and financial

tasks.● Administering the relevance and quality of academic and research programmes.

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● Providing equitable access to and affordability of academic programmes for various sections ofsociety.

● Building optimization and integration of modern methods of teaching and learning.● Establishing credibility of evaluation procedures.● Ensuring the adequacy, maintenance and proper allocation of support structure and services.● Sharing of research findings and networking with other institutions in India and abroad.

Functions - Some of the functions expected of the IQAC are the following:● Development and application of quality benchmarks/parameters for various academic and

administrative activities of the institution.● Creation of a learner-centric environment conducive to quality education and faculty maturation to

adopt the required knowledge and technology for participatory teaching and learning process.● Arrangement for feedback from students, parents and other stakeholders on quality-related

institutional processes.● Dissemination of information on various quality parameters of higher education.● Organization of inter and intra institutional workshops, seminars on quality related themes and

promotion of quality circles.● Documentation of the various programmes/activities leading to quality improvement.● Operation as a nodal agency of the institution for coordinating quality-related activities, including

adoption and dissemination of best practices.● Development and maintenance of institutional databases through MIS for the purpose of

maintaining/enhancing the institutional quality.● Development of a quality culture in the institution.● Preparation of the Annual Quality Assurance Report (AQAR) as per guidelines and parameters of

NAAC, to be submitted to NAAC.

Benefits - IQAC facilitates/contributes towards the following:● Ensuring a heightened level of clarity and focus in institutional functioning towards quality

enhancement.● Promoting internalization of the quality culture.● Enhancing and coordinating various activities of the institution and institutionalizing all good

practices.● Providing a sound basis for decision-making to improve institutional functioning.● Acting as a dynamic system for quality changes in Higher Education Institutions (HEIs).● Building an organized methodology of documentation and internal communication.

Sr. No. Nature of Membership Ex-officio Members / Nominated member

1 Professor Rahul Banerjee Chairperson (Director)

2 External Member (Academia) Professor Amitabha Tripathi (IITD)

3 External Member (Academia) Professor Paritosh Pandya (TIFR)

4 External Member (Academia) Dr. Hemant Purohit (George Mason University)

5 External Member (Industry) To Be Announced

6 Ex-officio Member Dean of Academic Affairs

7 Ex-officio Member Dean of Academic Research

8 Ex-officio Member Dean of Sponsored Research

9 Ex-officio Member Dean of Students Affairs

10 Ex-officio Member Dean of Faculty Affairs

11 Ex-officio Member Registrar or Registrar's nominee

12 Ex-officio Members All Heads of Departments

13 Member Professor R.P. Gorthi

14 Member Professor R. Gangopadhyay

15 Member Professor Manju Dhariwal

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16 Member Professor A.P. Singh

17 Two Student Representatives (to benominated by Dean of StudentsAffairs)

Be Announced

18 Convener Professor Raghuvir Tomar

D - QARC (Departmental - Quality Assurance in Research Committee)The following Departmental Quality Assurance in Research Committee (D-QARC) was constituted for thepurpose of evaluating or advising with respect to the research related matters in the area of operation of thedepartment:

a. Support for national or international conferences as per rules of the Institute, in keeping with thefaculty incentivization policy (a copy of this may be obtained from the Registrar's Office, if needed).

b. Reviewing any request for doubling the annual research grant of the faculty based on researchperformance or teaching performance in the preceding academic session as per the above referredpolicy.

c. Approving any sponsored project funding proposals to be submitted to the external funding agency byany member of the Department or department itself.

d. Monitoring the departmental Doctoral candidates (routine progress, overall work etc.), thesis work ofMasters' students and BTP project work based on a policy to be created by the department keepingwith the provisions of the Academic Council.

e. Evaluating any requests received from Doctoral, Master's and Bachelor's students about any supportrequested by them that involves research or research related paper presentation etc.

f. Evaluating any requests received from Doctoral, Master's and Bachelor's students about any supportrequested by them that involves research or research related paper presentation etc.

g. Any other research and development related activity that the Department or its members may need todeliberate upon.

The D-QARC would be authorized to co-opt or invite any other faculty or expert as per need in a given case.

All matters which D-QARC finds non-resolved at the D-QARC level could be reported to Institute level QARC.

Current composition of D-QARC is as follows:

Sr. No. Ex-officio Members / Nominated member Nature of Membership

1 Prof. Mohan Kadalbajoo Chairperson

2 Prof. Ranjan Gangopadhyay- Member

3 Dean (R & D) Ex-officio Member

4 All the Head of Departments Ex-officio Member

QATC (Quality Assurance In Teaching Committee)Quality Assurance Teaching Committee (QATC) is one of the many quality assurance monitoring andmentoring committees of the institute which is headed by the chairman and helped by select members fromacross various disciplines. Typically, chairman of the QATC is a senior professor of the institute who is widelyrespected for his teaching quality both amongst faculty and students. The chairman of the QATC receives acopy of detailed faculty feedback for assisting him in appropriate forms of analyses and subsequentcounseling and advisory of respective heads of the departments and individual faculty. In certain cases, QATCmay report a few cases to the director for any suitable action. Apart from QATC, teaching quality assurancealso involves individual faculty members, head of the department, dean of academic affairs and the director.

Sr. No. Ex-officio Members / Nominated member Nature of Membership

1 Professor R. Tomar Chairperson

2 Dean of Academic Affairs Ex-officio Member

3 Dean of Academic Research Ex-officio Member

4 Professor M.K. Kadalbajoo Member

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5 Professor R.P. Gorthi Member

6 Professor R. Gangopadhyay Member

7 Professor Anupam Singh Member

8 Professor Somnath Biswas Member

9 Professor Manju Dhariwal Member

10 Professor A.P. Singh Member

11 Dr. Vikram Sharma Member

12 Dr. Kamal Kishore Khatri Member

13 Dr. Amit Neogi Member

14 Dr. Rajbir Kaur Member

15 Dr. Anirudh Agarwal Member

4.7. AC – HMC (Academic Council – Hostel Management Committee)The AC-HMC is primarily concerned with the management of all aspects of the hostels of the institute,including the mess and the shopping area. The AC-HMC frames the rules and regulations to be followed by thestudents, as residents of the hostels. These rules and regulations require approval of the AC.

The chairperson AC-HMC has the power to reprimand or impose a fine or take any other suitable measureagainst any resident of the hostels, who violates (If the severity level of offence is low) the approved rules andregulations of the hostels with notification to the chairperson AC-SAC. However, it is the responsibility of thechairperson, AC-HMC to refer the serious disciplinary cases of students to the AC-SAC, if the severity level ofthe offence is high.

Sr. No. Ex-officio Members / Nominated member Nature of Membership

1 Dr. Ajit Patel, Chief Warden Ex Officio-Chairperson

2 Dr. Anupam Singh, Dean Students Affair Ex officio Advisor

3 Dr. Vikas Gupta, Associate Chief Warden Ex officio Member

4 Dr. Pomita Ghoshal, Warden Girls Hostel Ex-officio Member

5 Dr. Manish Garg, Warden BH-1 Ex officio Member

6 Dr. Mohit Makkar, Warden BH-2 Ex officio Member

7 Dr. Ashok Garai, Warden BH-3 Ex officio Member

8 Dr. Sandesh Chougule, Warden BH-4 Ex officio Member

9 Dr. Sunil Kumar, Assistant Professor, CSE Nominated Member

10 Student representative, Girls Hostel Nominated Member

11 Student representative, BH-1 Nominated Member

12 Student representative, BH-2 Nominated Member

13 Student representative, BH-3 Nominated Member

14 AR (Students Services) Member Secretary

4.8. Ethics CommitteeIn order to deliberate upon a range of relevant issues with respect to teaching, research, experimentation ofkinds involving humans as well as animals and other relevant functions of the institute, an ethics committeehas been constituted.

A. Composition: The composition of the committee is as under:

Sr. No. Ex-officio Members / Nominated member Nature of Membership

1 Prof. A.P. Singh Chairman

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2 Dean , Academic Affairs Member

3 Dean, Sponsored Research & Consultancy Member

4 Dean Academic Research Member

5 Dean, Faculty Affairs Member

6 Dean, Student Affairs Member

7 Dean, Alumni Affairs and Resource Generation Member

8 Dean, Admission and Placement Member

9 Chairman, QARC Member

10 Chairman, QATC Member

11 Dr. Vikram Sharma Convener

B. Additional co-opted Members: As per content/needs of situations committee may invite/co-opt up tothree people as Invited/Co-opted Member.

C. Terms of Referencea. Ethics committee examines all those cases referred to it by the director and reports its findings to the

director within the stipulated time frame.b. All proceedings of the Ethics committee and any correspondence with respect to it, as well as its

report are considered confidential and except for regulatory bodies, law and enforcement agenciesand people explicitly permitted by the institute through an official notification, no one gets access tothese documents because of their sensitive nature.

c. In case for any reason, the Ethics committee does not find itself in a position to arrive at an informeddecision due to lack of knowledge in a subject area, with the consent of the director, it co-opts amaximum of three experts in the relevant area, preferably from the institute.

d. In a given meeting, presence of at least those Deans and HoDs are required whose operations arerelevant to the subject matter under consideration.

4.9. PCC (Purchase and Condemnation Committee)Purchase and Condemnation Committee (PCC) is an official body of the institute as defined in the purchasemanual for operations related to purchases and condemnation. Current composition of the committee is asfollows:

Sr. No. Ex-officio Members / Nominated member Nature of Membership

1 Dr. Soumitra Debnath Chairman

2 Dr. Rakesh Tibrewal Nominated Member

3 Purchase Officer Ex officio Member Secretary

4 Registrar Ex officio Invitee

5 Finance Officer Ex-officio Invitee

4.10. Sub-Committees of Academic Council

AC – AAC (Academic Council – Academic Affairs Committee)The sub-committee of the Academic Council– “Academic Affairs Committee” (AC-AAC) is to advise theAcademic Council on the recommendations of the Board of Studies for ensuring consistency and coherenceacross the departments. Academic Council seeks advice in the academic matters as and when required, suchas common aspects of curricular structure and institute-wide provisions across disciplines. Therecommendations of the Board of Studies are first received by the AC-AAC and then placed before theAcademic Council with advice and recommendations of AC-AAC for decision.

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Sr. No. Category Nature ofMembership

Members / Nominated member

1 Dean Academic Ex-OfficioChairperson

2 Associate DeanAcademic

Ex-Officio ViceChairperson

3 All Heads of theDepartment

Ex-Officio Member

4 All InterdisciplinaryCourse Coordinators

Ex-Officio Member

5 AR Academic Ex-Officio MemberSecretary

6 StudentRepresentative

Nominated Members Student Representative : M.Sc.Vashisth Sharma (19MPH007)

7 Student Representative : M. Tech.Shrikrishna Bansal (19MCS005)

8 Student Representative : UGSanjana Bansal (19UCC135)

9 Student Representative : UGChaitanya Sharma (19UCC010)

AC – EPC (Academic Council – Educational Policy Committee)The AC-EPC concentrates upon fundamental educational policy issues, for example, the desirability of startinga new academic programme at the institute. Such fundamental issues can be referred to this committee by theGoverning Council, the AC, or any standing committee of the AC. The committee can also initiate a discussionon any issue, consistent with the overall goals of the institute, on its own, and make appropriaterecommendations to the AC for its consideration. AC-EPC meets at least once in each semester/term.

Sr. No. Category Nature ofMembership

Members / Nominatedmember

1 Chairman of the Academic Council(Professor Rahul Banerjee)

Chairman (Ex-Officio)

2 One Research Professor(Professor Ranjan Gangopadhyay)

CCE, ECE Vice-Chairman & Member

3 One Distinguished Professor(Professor Mohan K Kadalbajoo)

Mathematics Member

4 One Industry Professor or a Professor withSizeableIndustry experience (Professor Raguvir Tomar)

CCE, ECE Member

5 One Emeritus Professor or a Visiting Professor(Professor Ravi P Gorthi)

CSE Member

6 Dean of Academic Research(Professor Somanth Biswas)

Physics Member (Ex-officio)

7 Dean of Academic Affairs HSS Convener (Ex-Officio)

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(Dr. Narendra Kumar)

8 HoD / a Senior Faculty Member fromunrepresented Department , if any(Dr. Vikaram Sharma)

MME Invitee

4.11. Disciplinary CommitteesAnti-Ragging CommitteeAs per provisions of UGC regulation on curbing the menace of ragging in higher educational institutions 2009,an anti-ragging committee has been constituted for ensuring the compliance of provision of the said UGCregulations. The committee also ensures compliance of the provisions of any law in force concerning raggingand to monitor and oversee the performance of the anti-ragging squad in prevention of ragging in theinstitution. The composition of the committee is as follows:

Sr. No. Category Nomination Members

1 Chairman Prof. Subhayan Biswas Nominated by Director

2 Chairman — Anti- RaggingSquad

Dr. Rakesh Tibrewala Ex-officio Member

3 One representative of CivilAdministration

Shri Madan Gujjar, Sarpunch,Sumel Panchayat, Village - Sumel,Jaipur Mobile No – 9929454205

Nominated Member

4 One representative of PoliceAdministration

Shri Mukesh Yadav, Constable, JaiSingh Pura Khor, Brahmpuri PoliceStation, Jaipur, Mobile No.8764865992

Nominated Member

5 One representative of localmedia

Shri Manish Godha, RajasthanCorrespondent, NaviDuniya, Ph. No. 0141-2709989

Nominated Member

6 One representative ofNon-GovernmentOrganizations

Dr. K. B. Kothari, Managing TrusteePratham, Rajasthan24, Pushpa Path, Uniara Bagg, MotiDoongri Road,Jaipur, Mobile No. 9351414259

Nominated Member

7 Dean of Student Affairs Prof. Anupam Singh Ex-officio Member

8 Chief Warden Dr. Ajit Patel Ex-officio Member

9 One representative of a parentof a fresher student to benominated by chairperson

Mr. Sanjay BansalF/o Shubham BansalAddress : Shiv ColonySubhashpura Near Lal QuartersBikaner- 334001Contact : 9414278347

Nominated Member

10 One representative of a parentof senior student to benominated by chairperson onrecommendation ofDean of Student Affairs

Meghna RathoreM/o Eklavya ShekhawatContact : 9784829706Address : 344, Officers Campus,Sirsi Road, Vaishali Nagar, Jaipur

Nominated Member

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11 One student representativebelonging to the freshercategory from Anti-RaggingSquad onrecommendation of Dean ofStudents Affairs

Shubham Bansal (ECE) -20UEC127Contact No.: 917737278724

Nominated Member

12 One student representativebelonging to the senior studentsfrom Anti-Ragging Squad onrecommendation of Dean ofStudents Affairs

Milap Trivedi (ECE) - 18UEC163Contact No.: 918769916269

Nominated Member

13 AR-SS Mr. Samar Singh Secretary

4.12. Minority Cell

Sr. No. Name OfficialDesignation

Mobile No. E-mail ID Designation

1 Dr. Kamal KishoreKhatri

AssociateProfessor MME

9414961287 [email protected] Chairperson

2 Dr. Surinder SinghNehra

AssistantProfessor HSS

9460586151 [email protected] Member

3 Dr. Syed hasanRizvi

Guest FacultyMaths

9761551355 [email protected] Member

4 Mrs. Suni Thomas PS to Director 9460574479 [email protected] Member

5Mr. ParwezAhmad Ansari

LibraryInformationAssistant

7728043089 [email protected] Member

4.13. CPIO-AA-CVO RTI

Sr. No. Name Designation

1 Mr. Rajeev Saxena, Assistant Registrar- Academic Chief Public Information Officer (CPIO)

2 Dr. Renu Bapna, Registrar Appellate Authority (AA)

3 Prof. Manju Dhariwal, Professor Department of HSS Chief Vigilance Officer (CVO)

4.14. NDLI Club

Sr. No. Name Official E-mail ID Designation

1 Prof. Rahul Banerjee Director [email protected] Patron

2 Prof. RanjanGangopadhyay

Research ProfessorDepartment of ECE

[email protected] President

3 Dr. Ashok Dargar Associate Professor of MME [email protected] Executive

4 Dr. Shweta Pandey Assistant Librarian [email protected] Secretary

4.15. International Student Relations Office

Sr. No. Category and Nomination Members

1 In view of this, a new office called International Student Relations Office is hereby set up with Prof.

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Manju Dhariwal as the Dean of International Students' Relations (DoISR).

2Until later specified, this new responsibility shall run alongside her current responsibility as theDean of Alumni Affairs and Resource Generation (DoAARG).

3

Until number of international students grows sizeable, the Jr. Officer (Alumni Service) shall alsohandle the office related responsibility of International Students' Relations Office. This officeshall be co-located with the Alumni Relations Office in the GH Alumni area until new spacebecomes available.

5. RESEARCH PROJECTS5.1. MoUs & Research Collaborations

Memorandum of Understanding (MoU)

Name of the Organisation/Institution/ Industry with

whom MoU is signed

Year ofsigning

MoU

Durationof MoU

List of Activities under MoU

Episource India Pvt. Ltd. 2021 2 years ● To engage in joint research and industryprojects of mutual areas of interest

● To provide Internship/Full-timeemployment opportunities to qualifyingcandidates from the institute

● To work together for placement,training, and knowledge sharing

● To support academic activities withindustry perspective

● To conduct joint international/nationalevents like conference, workshops,within the area of mutual interest wherethe expenditure may be shared

TeCIP Institute, ScuolaSuperiore Sant’Anna, Pisa, Italy

2021 5 years The scope of co-operation between the Partiesshall include the following areas of ICT:

● Computer Science and Informatics● Next Generation Communication and

Networking● Photonics Technologies● Micro-robotics● Telemedicine

Celebal Technologies,Jaipur, Rajasthan

2021 Open ● Placement Programs & InternshipOpportunities

● Training workshops on latesttechnologies

● Technical hands-on training for Pre-finalYear Students in marked courses

● Faculty Development Programs in DataScience, Big Data and Enterprise Cloud

● Initiation of joint efforts in designingand offering certificate programs inspecific areas of newage technologies

Consorzio NazionaleInteruniversitario per leTelecomunicazioni (CNIT),PISA, Italy

2021 Open To Contribute the preparation of a Technologyand Scientific Cooperation Programmebetween India and Italy

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INFLIBNETCenter,Shodhganga/ShodhgangotriGandhinagar

2020 Open To take part in the process of digitization of oldtheses and dissertations and building up ofdigital repository and to promote, share andhost its ETD in ‘Shodhganga : A reservoir ofIndian theses submitted to the Universities inIndia’ and other universities in open access.

National Institute ofPharmaceutical Education andResearch (NIPER)-HyderabadHyderabad, Telangana

2020 5 Years Formulation, optimization and antiviral activityanalysis of Neem extract based silver/titaniumdioxide nanoparticles as disinfectant filmforming spray solution

Artificial Intelligence Institute,University of South Carolina,USA

2020 5 Years ● Exchange of students for a given periodthrough a recognized exchangeprogram/summer exposure programme

● Exchange of faculty members of the twoinstitutes

● Exchange of research material anddocumentation

● Coordination in joint or collaborativeresearch projects

IIT Jodhpur (NM-ICPSTechnology Innovation Hub inComputer Vision and VirtualReality)

2020 Open Student Exchange Programme and JointResearch Activities in the core and applicationareas of computer vision and virtual reality

Research Collaborations

Sr.No.

Title of thecollaborative

activity

Name of thecollaboratingagency with

contactdetails

Name of theparticipant

Year ofcollaboration

Duration Nature of theactivity

Link to therelevant

document

1 Joint ResearchPublications

BeijingComputationalScienceResearchCenter, Beijing,100193, China

Dr. NabyenduDas

2021 2019-2021 Collaborativeresearch

work(Theory)

https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1361-648X/ac08b7/meta

2 LNMIITUndergraduateSummerInternshipProgram(LUSIP)

The HappyCollar

Dr. AmitNeogi

2021 2021 Projects forundergraduat

e studentsrelated to

body-mindbalancing

https://lusip.lnmiit.ac.in/projects.php

3 OnlineTrainingprogram onDigital CircuitDesign andVerificationusing Vivado

CoreElTechnologiesPrivate Limited

Dr. SandeepSaini and Dr.Kusum Lata

2020 25th May-12th June

2020

3 Weeksfaculty

developmentprogram in

collaborationwith theindustrypartner,CoreEl

Technologies

http://vesd.lnmiit.ac.in/SummerTraining/

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5.2. External FundingResearch and Development Projects

Name of theScheme/Project/

Endowments/ Chairs

Name of thePrincipal

Investigator/Co-

Investigator (ifapplicable)

Name of theFundingagency

Type(Government/

Non-Government)

Department Fundsprovided

(INR inlakhs)

Durationof the

project

Evaluation Study onScheduled CastesSub-Plan (TSP)component of ServaShiksha Abhiyan(SSA) and RashtriyaUchchtar ShikshaAbhiyan (RUSA)

Surinder SinghNehra (CO-PI)

University ofRajasthan,

RUSA

Government(The Fundsused at PI

Institute (TotalFunding for the

projectRs.171.97 Lakhs)

HSS NA 4

A novel concentratorphotovoltaic systemscombined withconfined jetimpingement andthermoelectricgenerator in anintegrateddesign-Experimentalstudy

Sandesh S.Chougule

DST-SERB Government MME Sponsor-ship

3

IndoLegal2Vec:Learning Word andDocumentRepresentationsfrom Hindi andEnglish Indian LegalCorpus to HelpEnable FasterDelivery of Justice

Kshitiz Verma SERB,DST-GoI

Government CSE 18.3 3

Multimodal userinterface for assistingelderly people inindoor environment

Joyeeta Singha DST-SEED Government ECE 23.83686 3

Energy EfficientRF/VLC Networks forIoT Applications

Nikhil Sharma SERB,DST-GoI

Government ECE 35.17096 3

Magneto-transportStudies of ZnO BasedMagnetic TunnelJunctions Fabricatedby Ion Implantation

SomnathBiswas

UGC-DAE Government Physics 14.8 3

Development ofefficient polymersolar cells based onconjugated polymersand non fullerenesmall moleculesacceptors with lowenergy loss

Ganesh DattSharma

DST (BRICS) BRICS Physics

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Low cost flexibleorganic solar cellsbased onnon-fullereneacceptors asrenewable energyconversion.

Ganesh DattSharma

DST, GITA(Indo-Taiwa

n)

Government Physics 14 3

A Locking SystemTechnologyInformationForecasting andAssessment Council(TIFAC) T.I(29)/TIFA/2018 Patentfiling sponsorshipApplication no.201911007724

AbhishekSharma

TechnologyInformationForecasting

andAssessment

Council(TIFAC)

Government ECE Sponsor-ship

1

Sign Language toRegional LanguageConverter (SLRC)

AbhishekSharma

DST-SEED Government ECE 42.88161 3

5.3. LUSIP ProjectLNMIIT Undergraduate Summer Internship Program (LUSIP)The LNMIIT Undergraduate Summer Internship Program is a flagship summer internship program of theLNMIIT Jaipur. It started in 2013. Every year, the program is conducted to provide project-based learning tothe students across the globe.

This program witnesses some of the novel and interesting projects being completed by the undergraduatestudents in a stipulated time of maximum 2 months. Some of the projects involved usage of latesttechnologies, trending in the industry. Most of the projects offered, have a practical utility and are oftentangible. The projects were not limited to any particular year of under-graduation and thus the program wasa great exposure for the students especially for first and second year UF students. LUSIP actually providesthem with ample of head-room to experiment, without much opportunity cost to explore their areas ofinterest.

The LNMIIT Jaipur intends to continue this well established program in future as well. With the support ofresearch-oriented faculty members of the institute, we can only expect this program to grow in positivedirection in each incoming year.

LUSIP results for the latest year and list of projects is always present at the website http://lusip.lnmiit.ac.in/.

Sr. No. Year Number of Students Number of Projects

1. 2017 153 54

2. 2018 122 34

3. 2020 116 23

4. 2021 139 33

Total 530 144

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List of Projects during 2020 – 21

Sr. No Project Title Supervisor Prerequisite Preferredyear of UG

1 Humanitarian Supply ChainManagement

Vikram Sharma None All

2 Visual attention model -image speaks

Joyeeta Singha image processing All

3 Preserving security andprivacy for Healthcare systemusing Blockchain

Jayaprakash Kar Security and Cryptography CSE 3rd and4th

4 Neural Network adaptive PIDcontrol

Bharat Verma Control System and NeuralNetwork

ECE, CCE andEE any year

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5 Turbo Codec for 5GDECT-2020

Divyang Rawal Communication, SignalProcessing

All

6 LDPC codec simulation Divyang Rawal Communication , SignalProcessing

All

7 Extracting medicalInformation from Youtubevideos

Amit Neogi sincerity, regularity All

8 Dynamic Provable DataPossession for Cloud storage

Jayaprakash Kar Network Security &Cryptography,Cryptographic Algorithm

3rd and 4thyear

9 Design of a wideband AMCbased ground plane forreduction of SAR

ShankarBhattacharjee

Basic knowledge of antennaand microwave

3rd and 4thyear ECE, CCE

10 Design of a multibandantenna for remotehealth-monitoring system

ShankarBhattacharjee

Basic knowledge ofantennas and Microwave

3rd and 4thyear ECE, CCE

11 Role of Media in(De)Constructing theCOVID-19 Narrative: A study

Manju Dhariwal None 2nd and 3rdyear

12 Mapping of local culture anddisease profiles acrossvarious ethnographies ofIndia

Amit Neogi Nil All

13 Creativization of preventativehealth content for deeperunderstanding by laymen

Amit Neogi Nil All

14 Social media management for`The Happy Collar' - A uniqueinitiative for body-mindbalancing

Amit Neogi Nil All

15 Connecting the old and newwith scientific evidence-basedapproach

Amit Neogi Nil All

16 A study of algebraic numberfields

Neeraj Group theory and ringtheory

3rd and 4rhyear

17 Group-IV alloy basedPhotonic Devices: Breakingthe Fundamental Limit of SiPhotonics

HarshvardhanKumar

Students must have basicknowledge aboutSolid-state devices. Theymust know programming inMATLAB.

All ECE, CCE

18 Edge Computing andForcasting

AbhishekSharma

Python and ML All

19 Designing RISC-V system formultimedia application

AbhishekSharma

Xilinx Vivado All

20 CMOS Amplifiers for LowPower High SpeedCommunication Circuits

NIKHIL RAJ Basic Electronics All

21 SIW based antenna designs SuvadeepChoudhury

Knowledge on antennaengineering

All ECE, CCE

22 My-Covid Mohit Gupta Knowledge of Androidapplication and Webapplication development

2nd year

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23 VLC system Implementationusing FPGA

NIKHIL RAJ Hardware DescriptionLanguage

All

24 Battery management system GauravChatterjee

Digital and Analog circuits.Embedded programmingskills.

All

25 Deep Learning based PlantDisease Detection

Sandeep Saini Python and ML 2nd 3rd and4th year

26 Deep learning based CancerDetection

Kusum Lata Python 2nd 3rd and4th year

27 Physical parameteroptimization of spring massdamper system

Servesh KumarAgnihotri

Basic mathematics ME all years

28 Analysis of COVID-19 Data Mukesh K Jadon Python programming All

29 Classification of COVID-19Data

Mukesh K Jadon Python programming All

30 Leave Management App forThe LNMIIT employees

Mukesh K Jadon Java and Mobile Appprogramming

All

31 Stock price prediction usingDeep Learning

Vikas Bajpai None 2nd and 3rdyear allbranches.

6. ALUMNI CELLAlumni AssociationThe LNM Institute of Information Technology has an Alumni Association, which was incepted as an informalbody in the year 2011. After incorporating the suggestions given by alumni and other stakeholders, it becamea formal Alumni Association in the year 2015 with a student team headed by coordinators and facultymentors. In the year 2017, the positions of dean and assistant dean of alumni association and resourcegeneration were created. It has one dedicated alumni officer to look into its day-to-day activities. Today itfunctions as a full-fledged administrative body of the institute.

The mission of the LNMIIT Alumni Association is to foster a lifelong and mutually beneficial relationshipbetween the Institute and its alumni. Through increased opportunities for meaningful engagement, theAlumni Association perpetuates a sense of pride in and a commitment to the outstanding qualities of theInstitute and the academics it provides.

The objectives of the Alumni Association are as follows:

● Create a strong network between Alumni and the Institute.● Establish a strong network for Alumni as well as students’ progress.● Promote a sustained sense of belonging to the alma mater among the alumni by keeping regular

contact with them.● Provide a forum for professional growth of the alumni by organizing reunion activities.● Maintain and update the latest information of all alumni.

With these objectives, we have been able to make strong ties among alumni and the institute. The excellentrapport shared between the faculty and alumni has led to a strong bond and network between alumni and theinstitute. Many of our alumni are willing to 'Give-Back' to their alma mater through different kinds ofassociations as a sign of their gratitude and affinity towards the institution.

Roles & Responsibilities of Alumni Association

● Making a Strong network between Alumni and Institute.● Organizing Annual Alumni Meets, Chapter Meets etc.

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● Maintaining and updating alumni database.● Organizing Mentorship Programmes by alumni for their juniors.● Organizing ‘Alumni talks’ regularly.● Updating various events organized in LNMIIT on Social Media to reach out to Alumni.● Maintaining LNMIIT’s alumni database via LinkedIn account, WhatsApp and Facebook.

Benefits of Alumni Association Membership

● Introduction to a Strong Network of Alumni.● Access to Alumni career services.● Use of social platforms for career guidance.● Engagement with classmates, faculty and current batch of students.● Provision for extending professional help and support to needy and bright students.

Our alumni occupy prominent positions in different sectors like Banking, Finance, IT, Teaching, Entrepreneuretc. Many of them occupy key positions in private and public sector undertakings in India and abroad. TheInstitute has a track record of outstanding performance of its pass-outs in different spheres. Our alumnialways contribute their knowledge and help the institute in different ways:

Placements - The alumni network of the institute is one of the key sources for placements and internships.Alumni always help to place their juniors at their respective organizations.

Mentorship - Our alumni always play an active role in voluntary programmes like mentoring students intheir areas of expertise. They do this through Alumni talks and student-driven mentorship programme like‘Know your Alumni’, besides other online activities. The alumni of the institute is guiding and nurturing ourstudents for the dynamic IT industry. It is our plan to develop everlasting relations with our alumni which inturn will give rise to mutual benefits.

Career Guidance - Alumni is a huge talent pool whose guidance can be beneficial to many students and otherfellow-alumni in their respective areas of study and work.

Networking Platform - Alumni network is one of the best professional networking platforms available todayin the institute. The students and alumni use the alumni portal to post jobs, events and internships. Itsupports a strong Alumni Referral Network (ARN) to provide research, industry and academic opportunitiesand has a membership of around 2200 alumni. Link to the alumni portal: https://alumni.lnmiit.ac.in/

Some of the social media platforms used by alumni to remain connected are: WhatsApp groups, socialwebsites like Facebook, LinkedIn. Total 500+ alumni are connected via WhatsApp groups. More than 2200plus alumni are connected via Facebook and LinkedIn & Alumni portal.

The LNMIIT Alumni Association has proposed “The Distinguished Alumnus Award (DAA)” from the currentacademic year; this award will be given to alumni in recognition of their achievements in their respectivefields of expertise. The requirements and eligibility criteria for the award will be notified in due course andthe awards will be presented from the next academic session.

The time has also come for the university to reach out to its alumni across India and around the globe tocontribute to “LNMIIT Alumni Endowment Fund”. In an effort to recognize outstanding students, theendowed scholarship fund is the LNMIIT University initiative for providing financial assistance to LNMIITstudents and to support a competitive scholarship program. This fund is set up to help deserving studentsattain their educational goals through student scholarships.

Below mentioned are the details of alumni who have extended their support towards this noble cause:

Mr. Saket Modi (Y09) is the Co-founder and CEO of Safe Security, a Cybersecurity and Digital Business RiskQuantification platform company headquartered in Palo Alto, CA, that is backed by John Chambers (formerChairman: Cisco Inc. USA) and British Telecom.

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A computer science engineer by education, Mr. Modi founded Safe Security in2012 while in his final year of engineering. Incubated in IIT Bombay, SafeSecurity protects the digital infrastructure of multiple Fortune 500 companiesaround the world with its cyber risk measurement and mitigation platformcalled SAFE. Mr. Modi is a part of Fortune Magazine’s 40-under-40,Entrepreneur Magazine’s 35-under-35, Forbes Magazine’s 30-under-30 lists,among others.

Mr. Saket Modi is the first alumnus to sponsor an International ChairProfessorship at the LNMIIT in the area of Cybersecurity and Digital Forensics.

Mr. Saurabh Gupta (Y04) is an award-winning entrepreneur, digitaltransformation specialist, start-up evangelist, investor, and a Congo maestro.

Mr. Gupta’s entrepreneurial instinct motivated him to lay the foundation of atechnology company ‘Neutrino’ in Feb 2009 in India. Headquartered in Dubai,UAE since July 2013, Neutrino has diversified its businesses from technology toother business verticals that include General Trading, Aviation & Aerospace,Defence & Investments. He has been recognized by various National &International organizations for his work across the globe including IEEE ISI(Taiwan), Silicon India (USA), CIO Review (USA), National EntrepreneurNetwork (India), All India Achievers Foundation (India), and Global AchieversFoundation (India). He was one of the core founding team members of theworld's first digital telecom company in Saudi Arabia - Jawwy, under thecorporate leadership of Saudi Telecom Corporation.

Mr. Saurabh Gupta has contributed a sum of Rs. 22, 00000/ to the LNMIIT endowment fund. This corpus shallenable INR 1 lac merit scholarship per year to a student fulfilling designated merit requirements. Thescholarship will be called ‘Vandana Jain Merit Scholarship’ in the memory of our student, the late Ms. VandanaJain.

Activities conducted by Alumni Association in the Academic year 2020-2021

Alumni Talks

Title: Treading the path of Placements and HigherStudies

Speakers: Mr. Suman Saurabh (Y11) and Mr. KushalShah (Y11)

Date: 21 March 2021

Mode: Online

The speakers provided valuable insight in how tochoose a career. According to them, the best way tobecome certain about our interests is to dointernship in the desired field so as to determinewhether one is cut out for a particular job. They alsohighlighted the importance of referrals and coldcalling via LinkedIn connections to secure aninternship. A large attendance turnout and a largenumber of questions made the event an interactiveone!

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Title: Automated driving and Drive towards Vision Zero

Speaker: Dr. Anshu Gupta (Y05)

Date: 3 April 2021

Mode: Online

The alumni association was fortunate to rope in Dr. AnshuGupta, an alumnus of Y05 batch, currently GeneralManager-ADAS, Continental AG, who also holds thehonour of the youngest PHD graduate from The Universityof the Federal Armed Forces, Hamburg, Germany todeliver a talk on “Automated Driving and Drive towardsVision Zero”. The talk provided insights on the working ofsensors in Automated Vehicles and its future in India. Anintense round of questions and answers followed the talk.Anshu also offered to provide internships to our studentsin his company, Continental AG.

Title: Block chain In & Out

Speakers: Mr. Ayush Ranjan (Y12) and Mr. SushmitLavania (Y15)

Date: 19 June 2021

Mode: Online

Their talk was based on 'Blockchain In and Out'. Theyprovided a know-how into gathering investors and clientsapart from the Blockchain. Their startup, Huddle 01, isfocused on decentralizing video conferencing. Theircredibility received a significant boost by Huddle 01having the Blockchain School as a client. Huddle 01provides holistic video solutions for all the business needspowered by Web3 technology, with Simple UI, PowerfulSDK, Custom domain and In-depth analysis dashboard.

Title: Faang or Start-Up?

Speakers: Mr Shakti Kheria (Y11) and Mr Jitesh Goel(Y11)

Date: 26 June 2021

Mode: Online

This talk provided an insight into their chosen career andreinforced the importance of working towards the rightopportunities to be an ace in one’s field. Mr Shakti Kheriais currently working as a software engineer at Uber. MrJitesh Goel is presently working as a product manager atUpGrad after having worked with Amazon. He has alsocontributed as a founding team member at Acadview.

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Title: Importance of Consulting & Strategic Management

Speaker: Mr. Vikas Agarwal (Y13)

Date: 3 July 2021

Mode: Online

The focus of this talk was the importance of consultingand strategic management. Thus, with his soundknowledge into the world of consulting, our guest guidedstudents and shed considerable light on this section of theindustry.

Title: Transition from Software Development to BusinessManagement

Speaker: Ms. Simran Gupta (Y14)

Date: 18 July 2021

Mode: Online

An alumna of IIM Indore having work experience incompanies like Goldman Sachs, Infosys and Klaud9,Simran has knowledge and expertise in technical as wellas management fields. This talk gave insight into thetransition from Software Development to BusinessManagement and various career opportunities in thesefields. She focused on tools and skills needed to acecareer in IT industry.

Virtual Alumni Meet 1Event - Echo: The Past Beckons

Date: 24 July 2021

Echo: The Past BeckonsThe Alumni Association successfully conducted “ECHO: The Past Beckons”, the Virtual Alumni Meet forbatches Y09, Y10, Y11 and Y12 on July 24 2021.

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The much-awaited event started with an opening talk by the Dean of Alumni Association, Prof ManjuDhariwal. She expressed her gratitude to all the Alumni for joining in large numbers. She emphasised thesignificance of an alma mater in one’s life and described the beautiful bond between the teachers and alumni.She also requested everyone to remember our dear alumnus, Mr. Rishabh Tambi (Y06) and Prof. Lalit Jiwani,former faculty,ECE department, who left for their heavenly abode this year due to Covid.

The director, Prof. Rahul Banerjee, delivered the welcome address. He told the alumni about the new changesthat had taken place on the campus since they graduated from the institute. This included new infrastructure,various technological advancements and additions in labs, recruitment of new faculty members and increasedstudent strength. He discussed ways and means in which the alumni can contribute to their alma mater. Heemphasised the importance of education and the alternative ways adopted by the institute to sustain andmaintain the standards of education during the pandemic.

After the welcome, The Alumni Association student team came up with an exciting quiz game titled- “What’sBehind The Mask”, in which the alumni had to guess answers to questions about LNMIIT. A mask was placedat every blank, and the alumni had to figure out what could replace the mask. The overwhelming responses inthe chat box proved that the alumni enjoyed thoroughly and cherished the memories of their time spent inthe institute.

Next in line was the “Networking Lounge”. Alumni were given different google meet links where they couldchat, discuss and enjoy meeting each other in small groups. In total, 15 rooms were created, out of which, 5rooms were meant for interaction with the faculty members. The Alumni interacted among themselves andreminisced good old times. They were filled with a wistful longing to go back in time and recreate thosejoyous moments of love, and companionship with their batch mates. The faculty members were so glad to seethe name and fame earned by their students in the outside world. It was an emotional yet fun session for boththe teachers as well as the alumni. The exchange of memories, chats and incidents created a nostalgic vibeand took us a decade back when our alumni were still college students.

The event then witnessed a closing speech by Prof. A. P. Singh and Dr. Amit Neogi. “They called it Alumnireunion; we called it homecoming”, these words by Prof. A.P. Singh showed the beauty of the relationshipshared between the alumni and their alma mater. Dr. Neogi congratulated everyone for succeeding so well intheir respective careers and blessed them for an even more successful, happy and healthy life ahead. In all, itwas a fantastic event, and everyone enjoyed it thoroughly.

Glimpse of the Virtual Alumni Meet 1 for batches Y09, Y10, Y11 and Y12 on July 24, 2021

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Our graduate students have been accepted in prestigious universities and institutes of higher learning inforeign countries such as:

Aalborg University, Copenhagen, Denmark Rochester Institute of Technology, USA

Albert-Ludwigs-Universität, Freiburg im Breisgau,Germany

RWTH Aachen University, Aachen, Germany

Arizona State University, Phoenix, AZ, US RWTH Aachen University, Germany

Aston University, Birmingham, UK RWTH Aachen University, Germany

Australian National University, Canberra, Australia Simon Fraser University, Vancouver, Canada

Carnegie Mellon University, Pennsylvania, US Singapore University of Technology andDesign, Singapore

Deloitte Los Angeles, California , USA Tandon School of Engineering, NY University

ETSE-UAB, Spain Technical University Darmstadt, Germany

George Mason University, Virginia, USA Technical University of Munich, Germany

Helmut Schmidt University/ University of the FederalArmed Forces, Hamburg, Germany

Texas A&M University, College Station

Indiana University, Indiana, USA The University of Texas at Dallas, USA

INRIA, France University of California, San Diego, USA

King's College, London, UK University of Illinois, Chicago, USA

Missouri University of Science & Technology,Missouri, USA

University of Maryland, College Park

Nanyang Technological University (NTU), Singapore University of Minnesota, USA

National University of Ireland Galway, Ireland University of Southern California, Los Angeles

New Jersey Institute of Technology, New Jersey, USA University of Toronto, Canada

North Carolina State University, USA University of Windsor, Ontario, Canada

Northeastern University, Massachusetts Uppsala University, Sweden

Penn State University, Pennsylvania, USA Waterford Institute of Technology, Ireland

Polytechnic Institute of New York University, USA Worcester Polytechnic Institute,Massachusetts, US

Queensland University of Technology, Australia Wright State University, USA

Our alumni hold high positions in various corporate companies such as:

Addverb Technologies Pvt. Ltd Delhivery Pfizer

Adobe Episource India Pvt Ltd Pharm Easy

Amazon Go-Jek Samsung (R & D)

American Express (India) Pvt Limited Goldman Sachs Senra Tech Pvt Ltd

Arcelor Mittal Google Tata Consultancy Services (TCS)

BNY mellon Microsoft Uber

Bosch Nagarro Urban Clap

Daily Hunt NBC flexible solutions Wayfair

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7. STUDENT ACTIVITIES7.1. Literary Society

i. To commemorate the 125th birth anniversary of Netaji Subhas Chandra Boss and on the occasion of72nd Republic Day, The Literary Committee organized the annual event of “Open Discussion” onJanuary 26th,2021, in an online mode on Microsoft Teams. The topic for this event was “Farm bills area good solution to farmers’ woes.” It is a well-known fact that Farm Bills of 2020 have been one of themost arguable subjects of 2020-21. This open discussion paved the way for a healthy debate on theissue, where participants presented their opinions and thoughts on the latest happenings aroundthem. Participants set forth their views both in support and against the bills.

The event started with opening statements by the participants. Each participant was given one minuteto express their concerns and present their arguments. We strongly believe that opinions and ideasshould not be bounded by dialect, so the discussion had no language barrier. Participants actively putforth their views, and many discussed the violence and the tractor convoy at Red Fort that took placeon the same day. As a part of the debate, the participants were cross-questioned by their fellow mates.This discussion revealed many aspects of the Farm Bills, and participants also submitted their writtenarguments on the subject. It is essential to hold talks on such a topic that concerns an enormous massof society, as a responsible citizen of the country. The fact that the event was on the same day whenthere were cases of violence reported at Red Fort made it all the more critical. The event wasimpressively successful, and we look forward to conducting more events like these.

ii. To recognize the birth commemoration of Swami Vivekanand and on the event of National Youth Day,The Literary Committee coordinated the occasion of "Exploratory writing and IllustrationCompetition" on January 12, 2021, in an internet-based mode, passed on through emails and entriesacknowledged through google forms. National Youth Day is praised in view of Swamiji's significantconfidence in the young people of a country as its most significant asset. He accepted that the help ofyouth is fundamental for country-building and all-inclusive fraternity. Occasions as such bring asensation of obligation among the members as they are the young people of the country and what'swritten in the eventual fate of the country depends on how they have their influence in it.

The event began at 9 A.M. on January 12, 2021, with the connection of entries going dynamic for theparticipants. Every member was offered a chance to pen down their idea as an article or sonnet, theones with a considerably more striking creative mind could present their entrances as computerizedbanners. We accept that the contemplations of members ought to be boundless and consequently onemember was permitted to present different entries. Swamiji believed that young was to be figured toget ready for the future and considering the current situation where English is the primary mode ofdiscussion we limited the language to English. We have gotten various passages and everyone wasmore lovely than the past one. The victors were reported via mail. The occasion was astonishinglyeffective, and we anticipate directing more occasions like these.

iii. The intra-LC events mostly included some fun sessions to bring out the ideas of every individual. Theyincluded events like Just-a-Minute, open discussions, prompt writing, and debates.

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7.2. Student Activity CentreStudent Activity Centre (SAC) is the hub of all indoor student activities. It comprises three syntheticbadminton courts, multiple table tennis tables, one well-furnished squash court, boxing arena, karate arenawith mats, two gyms comprising machines for every aspect of a fit body, chess and carrom room. Additionally,there is a dance and music studio and an Open-Air Theatre (OAT) where all cultural events of the Institute areorganized.

Outdoor Sports FacilitiesFor holistic development of the students, a wide range of outdoor sports facilities are available including onecricket and football ground, two basketball and volleyball courts, a lawn tennis court, 3 km jogging/cyclingtrack, one open air gymnasium and a kabaddi ground.

During the last academic year, the world suffered with COVID-19 pandemic. Due to this reason, the institutewas closed for on-campus residence of the students. There were no outdoor and indoor sports eventsobserved in the last one year. However, the institute emphasizes on both the physical and mental health of thestudents, faculty members and all other employees directly or indirectly serving in its growth. In this regard,the institute has organized the following activities to fulfill the mental and physical well being of all of itsstakeholders.

Yoga Day CelebrationThe Seventh International Yoga Day was celebrated at LNMIIT on 21st June 2021 in virtual mode. The eventwas inaugurated by Yogacharya Umesh Sharma. Yogacharya Umesh Sharma is working at yogasthali DDRajasthan Jaipur as yoga demonstrator, National yoga referee, and Health related counsellor. During the yogasessions, numerous asanas were demonstrated by Yogacharya Umesh Sharma such as Asana (standing, sittingand laying down), Pranayama (Puraka, Rechaka, Kumbhaka, Kapalabhati Pranayama), Mudhra, Mediation,Suryanamaskar. Additionally, he also gave a lessons about yoga timing, appropriate dressing, and theimportance of yoga in the life of human beings by exploring the physical, spiritual and mental wellness.

The COVID-19 pandemic has disturbed the lives of all of us. The institute, under its excellent leadership, hasfocused on maintaining the professional and personal work-life balance during the last academic year wherethe online academic activities were carried out. It was found that the continuous online activities resulted inthe employees facing issues related to spondylitis, strains in eyes, severe headaches, etc. Thus, the instituteencouraged employees to participate in 100 days of Yoga programme named ‘Yoga for Unity and Well-being’organized during March 14 – June 21, 2021 by the Ministry of Ayush, Government of India.

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7.3. Media CellCP Ke CharcheAmidst the Pandemic, Media Cell came up with a series on its Instagram handle named "Stories of LNM."Under which people were asked to share their experiences in the college associated with places that werequite famous for different reasons. One of the editions of this series was "CP Ke Charche”. Central Plaza (CP), asite that brings in many memories, from club meets to quick conversations, from cheerful hellos to sadgoodbyes; this place has seen it all. All in all, it is not a place but an emotion. Media Cell in this event asked allthe people who have "been there, done that" to put all those emotions into words and tell all those stories(read: memories) they had all those times they crossed that place with their eyes on the ground and heartbeating loud. People willing to participate were asked to submit their entries by replying to the Instagramstory posted for the announcement. There were 35 participants, out of which 12 entries were selected. Thesebest entries selected were posted on the handle. A few of the glimpses are provided below.

On-Record Podcast“The parents are the first teachers and the teachers are the second parents who shape the future of thestudents”. By adhering to this agenda and to show gratitude towards the teachers’ efforts and guidance as thementors, the students of the media cell organized a podcast entitled “On Record”. The Teacher’s Daycelebration was done virtually through Google meet to go on with the then pandemic situation. The programwas pre recorded. We were fortunate enough to get some of the teachers on record where they shared highsand lows of college life and little nuggets of the big picture about what it means to live life. We played “whosemost likely to do this” and “this or that” with Dr. Anukriti Bansal Ma’am and Dr. Rajbir Kaur Ma’am. It washosted by Ms. Ananya Nautiyal and Ms. Anukriti Shrivastava. They shared some of their fond college memoriesand favorites among them. Mr. Lakshya Chaudhary and Mr. Sunny Saxena hosted the interview with Dr. GauravChatterjee sir and Dr. Sandeep Saini sir. It was both the fun as well as informative. The recording waspremiered live on YouTube. Some of the glimpses from the event are provided below.

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Spotlight 2021Spotlight 2021, an open mic event free for every kind of artist to participate in, was organized by Media Cell on8th May at 7:00 pm. The event lasted for 1 hour 30 mins and was hosted by Ms. Tanisha Belkar. Opened by Ms.Pallavi Gurbani, a soulful poet and artist, the event started with a great note with the audience mesmerized bythe piece performed. It was followed by an amazing lineup of artists, Ms. Swatantra Jain who performed afabulous mashup of songs, Ms. Garvika Joshi whose slam poetry, Dearest Mother, was stunning, Mr. AyushKulshreshth who performed an outstanding medley of old Bollywood songs and Mr. Arjun Saxena whose Hindipoetry was enlightening. The first session was closed by Mr. Vipul Ajmera, a fantastic singer and musician,with his melodious voice. The second session was opened by Mr. Manas Arora, a phenomenal singer and thefounder of Rhythmonics. The incredible piece was followed by Mr. Pratyush Shrivastav's energizing poetry, Mr.Pranjay Goyal's melodic performance, Ms. Bhavika Maharishi's harmonious covers of some beautiful songs, Mr.Abhishek Suman's beautiful take on common man's struggles, and last but not the least Mr. AnimeshKulshestha's electrifying performance. The event was sponsored by AioSports and won by Mr. Arjun Saxena inthe field of poetry and Ms. Swatantra Jain in the field of music. Some special mentions were Ms. Garvika Joshiand Mr. Pratyush Shrivastav.

DuologueOne good conversation can have a long-lasting impact on you. Nothing compares to a beautiful dialogue with abeautiful soul. We all have a story to tell: a story that defines us and narrates some precious moments of ourlives. To celebrate the magic of these short, yet meaningful conversations, Media Cell hosted Duologue, anevent where you get to talk to strangers, blindfolded, without revealing each other's identities, thusdiscovering the Joy of 'conversations sans judgment. Due to the coronavirus pandemic, this year's Duologuewas conducted online on 24th January, using a platform called 'Run The World'. It was an interestingexperience for students of Y20, who got a chance to interact with their batchmates in such a unique andimpactful way. The event was a huge success with the participation of over 400 students. Through Duologue,students wove the first stitch of the bond that's going to last them through this journey of college and beyond.

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8. PLACEMENTS AND INTERNSHIPS

B.Tech. Placement

Particulars 2016-17 2017-18 2018-19 2019-20 2020-21

Graduating Batch Strength 313 327 307 485 436

Registered Students Count 231 219 237 400 389

No. of Students Placed 205 200 232 377 (366 FTE+11 SLI)

373 (365FTE+ 8 SLI)

Placement Percentage vsTotal Students

65.49 61.16 75.57 77.73 85.55

Placement Percentage vsEligible Students

88.74 91.32 97.89 94.25 95.89

Salary Package (Average)(Amount in Lakhs)

7.31 7.55 9.64 11.79 11.46

Placement (Max, Min, Average Salary) - 2020-21

Discipline Maximum Minimum Average

CSE 5885873 360000 1365864

CCE 5885873 360000 1164241

ECE 5885873 360000 948499

ME 1419159 275000 744732

M.Tech.+M.Sc. 450000 450000 450000

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Particulars 2016-17 2017-18 2018-19 2019-20 2020-21

Graduating Batch Strength 313 327 307 485 436

Registered Count of Students 231 219 237 400 389

No. of Students Placed 205 200 232 377 373

Consolidated Statistics 2020-21

Sr. No. Component Value

1 Highest Package 58.85 Lakhs

2 Average Package 11.54 Lakhs

3 Median Package 8.73 Lakhs

4 Total Number of Offers (Internships + Full Time) 461

5 Percentage of Registered Students Placed 95.47%

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CTC wise distribution of companies in 2020-21

Elite Recruiters ( CTCabove 12.01 lpa)

Regular Recruiters ( CTC between6.01 lpa to 12 lpa)

Regular Recruiters ( CTCbetween 3.60 lpa to 6 lpa)

17 29 10

Salary Package (inLacs)

Department

CSE CCE ECE ME M.Tech-M.Sc.

Minimum 3.6 3.6 3.6 2.75 4.5

Average 13.65 11.64 9.48 7.44 4.5

Maximum 58.85 58.85 58.85 14.19 4.5

M.Tech. Placement

Particulars 2016-17 2017-18 2018-19 2019-20 2020-21

Total Number ofStudents

9 5 10 2 6

No. of EligibleStudents

_ _ 3 2 2(Registered

Count)

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No. of StudentsSelected

1 _ 3 _ 1

PlacementPercentage vs TotalStudents

_ _ 30 _ 16.66

PlacementPercentage vs EligibleStudents

_ _ 100 _ 50

Salary Package(min,max,average)

Min-350000,Max-350000,

Average-350000

_ Min-400000,Max-1070000,

Average-707500

_ Min-450000,Max-450000,

Average-450000

M.Sc. Placement

Particulars 2016-17 2017-18 2018-19 2019-20 2020-21

Total Number of Students NA 9 13 15 22

No. of Eligible Students NA - - - -

No. of Students Selected NA 1 2(Research

Intern)

- -

Placement Percentage vs Total Students NA - - - -

Placement Percentage vs EligibleStudents

NA - - - -

Salary Package (min,max,average) NA - - - -

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SLI/Summer Internship

Sr. No. Department SLI Summer Internship Total

1 B.Tech. CCE 46 39 85

2 B.Tech. CSE 109 69 178

3 B.Tech. ECE 79 19 98

4 B.Tech. ME 15 3 18

5 B.Tech.-M.Tech. CSE 0 4 4

6 B.Tech.-M.Tech. ECE 0 1 1

7 M.Tech. CSE 1 0 1

Total 250 135 385

List of Students Selected in SLI / Summer Internship

Sr. No. Roll No Name of the students Program Code Remaks

1 17UCC001 Aabha Sharma B.Tech CCE SLI

2 17UCC003 Abhay Gupta B.Tech CCE SLI

3 17UCC006 Aditi Chaturvedi B.Tech CCE SLI

4 17UCC009 Akhil Sharma B.Tech CCE SLI

5 17UCC010 Akshat Gupta B.Tech CCE SLI

6 17UCC011 Akshat Jain B.Tech CCE SLI

7 17UCC016 Arushi Maheshwari B.Tech CCE SLI

8 17UCC018 Atharva Sharma B.Tech CCE SLI

9 17UCC020 Deepak Kumar Singh B.Tech CCE SLI

10 17UCC021 Devansh Rastogi B.Tech CCE SLI

11 17UCC022 Dharmesh Poddar B.Tech CCE SLI

12 17UCC023 Harsh Kumbhat B.Tech CCE SLI

13 17UCC025 Himanshu Sharma B.Tech CCE SLI

14 17UCC026 Hina Gupta B.Tech CCE SLI

15 17UCC029 Keshav Taparia B.Tech CCE SLI

16 17UCC035 Mohit Kataria B.Tech CCE SLI

17 17UCC040 Nischal Sharma B.Tech CCE SLI

18 17UCC042 Pakhi Mangal B.Tech CCE SLI

19 17UCC043 Pranay Kothari B.Tech CCE SLI

20 17UCC048 Ritvik Singhal B.Tech CCE SLI

21 17UCC054 Sarthak Kanodia B.Tech CCE SLI

22 17UCC061 Tapish Gupta B.Tech CCE SLI

23 17UCC062 Utkarsh Khandelwal B.Tech CCE SLI

24 17UCC065 Vasundhara Shukla B.Tech CCE SLI

25 17UCC067 Vidhi Saini B.Tech CCE SLI

26 17UCC072 Anushrut B.Tech CCE SLI

27 17UCC073 Kritagya Chaturvedi B.Tech CCE SLI

28 17UCC075 Shivam Saluja B.Tech CCE SLI

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29 17UCS005 Abhimanyu Gupta B.Tech CSE SLI

30 17UCS006 Abhinav Mittal B.Tech CSE SLI

31 17UCS009 Aditi Taank B.Tech CSE SLI

32 17UCS017 Aman Raheja B.Tech CSE SLI

33 17UCS022 Aniket Poddar B.Tech CSE SLI

34 17UCS026 Anmol Garg B.Tech CSE SLI

35 17UCS027 Ansh Mehta B.Tech CSE SLI

36 17UCS028 Ansh Mittal B.Tech CSE SLI

37 17UCS029 Anshul Jain B.Tech CSE SLI

38 17UCS031 Anupam Shah B.Tech CSE SLI

39 17UCS032 Anurag Agarwal B.Tech CSE SLI

40 17UCS034 Arnab Sinha B.Tech CSE SLI

41 17UCS035 Arpit Agrawal B.Tech CSE SLI

42 17UCS040 Ashutosh B.Tech CSE SLI

43 17UCS041 Avi Mukhija B.Tech CSE SLI

44 17UCS042 Ayush Gupta B.Tech CSE SLI

45 17UCS051 Devesh Mishra B.Tech CSE SLI

46 17UCS054 Eklavaya Shekhawat B.Tech CSE SLI

47 17UCS059 Geet Agarwal B.Tech CSE SLI

48 17UCS061 Hardik Jain B.Tech CSE SLI

49 17UCS064 Harshit Garg B.Tech CSE SLI

50 17UCS065 Harshita Nagpal B.Tech CSE SLI

51 17UCS076 Kabeer Seth B.Tech CSE SLI

52 17UCS079 Khushwant Ramchandani B.Tech CSE SLI

53 17UCS080 Kopal Chakravarty B.Tech CSE SLI

54 17UCS081 Kumar Manas B.Tech CSE SLI

55 17UCS083 Lovee Hingorani B.Tech CSE SLI

56 17UCS087 Manish Choudhary B.Tech CSE SLI

57 17UCS091 Mohit Jindal B.Tech CSE SLI

58 17UCS092 Mohit Tiwari B.Tech CSE SLI

59 17UCS096 Naman Jain B.Tech CSE SLI

60 17UCS099 Nidhi Warde B.Tech CSE SLI

61 17UCS101 Nischal Goyal B.Tech CSE SLI

62 17UCS102 Nisha Goyal B.Tech CSE SLI

63 17UCS110 Piyush Chhalani B.Tech CSE SLI

64 17UCS111 Piyush Chowdhary B.Tech CSE SLI

65 17UCS114 Princy Garg B.Tech CSE SLI

66 17UCS115 Priyam Khandelwal B.Tech CSE SLI

67 17UCS117 Purva Udai Singh B.Tech CSE SLI

68 17UCS119 Rachna Tiwari B.Tech CSE SLI

69 17UCS125 Rhitayu Chattopadhyay B.Tech CSE SLI

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70 17UCS126 Richa Agarwal B.Tech CSE SLI

71 17UCS130 Ritik Bansal B.Tech CSE SLI

72 17UCS132 Rivanshu Goyal B.Tech CSE SLI

73 17UCS138 Sanchit Singh B.Tech CSE SLI

74 17UCS141 Sanskar Bindal B.Tech CSE SLI

75 17UCS143 Saurav Kishore B.Tech CSE SLI

76 17UCS146 Shatishay Jain B.Tech CSE SLI

77 17UCS148 Sheetal Chaturvedi B.Tech CSE SLI

78 17UCS150 Shivam Sharma B.Tech CSE SLI

79 17UCS155 Shruti Agrawal B.Tech CSE SLI

80 17UCS157 Shubham Pabuwal B.Tech CSE SLI

81 17UCS158 Shubhi Rustagi B.Tech CSE SLI

82 17UCS160 Subhajit Nandi B.Tech CSE SLI

83 17UCS162 Sukrit Sarna B.Tech CSE SLI

84 17UCS165 Tanmay Sharma B.Tech CSE SLI

85 17UCS175 Vatsal Agarwal B.Tech CSE SLI

86 17UCS176 Vedant Khaturia B.Tech CSE SLI

87 17UCS177 Vibhor Garg B.Tech CSE SLI

88 17UCS178 Vidit Kulshreshtha B.Tech CSE SLI

89 17UCS179 Vinayak Gupta B.Tech CSE SLI

90 17UCS181 Vipul Vaibhav B.Tech CSE SLI

91 17UCS182 Vishal Khandelwal B.Tech CSE SLI

92 17UCS184 Aditya Tawri B.Tech CSE SLI

93 17UCS187 Meenal Agarwal B.Tech CSE SLI

94 17UEC001 Aaryaman Sharma B.Tech ECE SLI

95 17UEC013 Abhishek Yadav B.Tech ECE SLI

96 17UEC014 Achintya Mittal B.Tech ECE SLI

97 17UEC017 Akshita Agarwal B.Tech ECE SLI

98 17UEC018 Aman Bhardwaj B.Tech ECE SLI

99 17UEC019 Anant Sharma B.Tech ECE SLI

100 17UEC021 Ankur Singh B.Tech ECE SLI

101 17UEC025 Apoorv Agarwal B.Tech ECE SLI

102 17UEC026 Apoorv Taneja B.Tech ECE SLI

103 17UEC028 Arpit Jain B.Tech ECE SLI

104 17UEC030 Avi Kasliwal B.Tech ECE SLI

105 17UEC032 Ayush Goyal B.Tech ECE SLI

106 17UEC036 Bhanu Ailani B.Tech ECE SLI

107 17UEC038 Bhavya Pareek B.Tech ECE SLI

108 17UEC042 Deepesh Khubchandani B.Tech ECE SLI

109 17UEC044 Dhruv Gupta B.Tech ECE SLI

110 17UEC046 Divya Gupta B.Tech ECE SLI

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111 17UEC051 Govind Rathi B.Tech ECE SLI

112 17UEC056 Hitesha Sharma B.Tech ECE SLI

113 17UEC059 Jayesh Agarwal B.Tech ECE SLI

114 17UEC060 Kajal Agarwal B.Tech ECE SLI

115 17UEC063 Keshav Nyati B.Tech ECE SLI

116 17UEC065 Khyati Goyal B.Tech ECE SLI

117 17UEC069 Mansi Mittal B.Tech ECE SLI

118 17UEC072 Megha Gupta B.Tech ECE SLI

119 17UEC081 Niladri Mullick B.Tech ECE SLI

120 17UEC086 Priyam Bhatia B.Tech ECE SLI

121 17UEC087 Puneet Asnani B.Tech ECE SLI

122 17UEC092 Rithvick Reddy Munagala B.Tech ECE SLI

123 17UEC095 Riya Gupta B.Tech ECE SLI

124 17UEC096 Riya Yadav B.Tech ECE SLI

125 17UEC098 Robin Singh B.Tech ECE SLI

126 17UEC104 Saloni Batra B.Tech ECE SLI

127 17UEC108 Sankalp Koolwal B.Tech ECE SLI

128 17UEC111 Shagun Marotiya B.Tech ECE SLI

129 17UEC112 Shivam Dwivedi B.Tech ECE SLI

130 17UEC116 Shreyansh Jain B.Tech ECE SLI

131 17UEC119 Shubham Kalra B.Tech ECE SLI

132 17UEC123 Siddharth Bhati B.Tech ECE SLI

133 17UEC125 Sourabh Kumar B.Tech ECE SLI

134 17UEC127 Sumedha Rana B.Tech ECE SLI

135 17UEC132 Tushar Jain B.Tech ECE SLI

136 17UEC139 Yash Shah B.Tech ECE SLI

137 17UEC142 Yukti Mittal B.Tech ECE SLI

138 17UEC143 Aditya Raj B.Tech ECE SLI

139 17UEC144 Harshit Chittora B.Tech ECE SLI

140 17UEC146 Yash Maheshwari B.Tech ECE SLI

141 17UME018 Daksh Bhatia B.Tech ME SLI

142 17UME027 Ishaan Kumar B.Tech ME SLI

143 17UME035 Kuljot Singh B.Tech ME SLI

144 17UME058 Shweta Dahiya B.Tech ME SLI

145 17UME064 Vinay Bohra B.Tech ME SLI

146 17UEC027 Arihant Jain B.Tech ECE SLI

147 17UEC101 Ronit Vairagi B.Tech ECE SLI

148 17UEC136 Yash Agrawal B.Tech ECE SLI

149 17UEC031 Avish Jain B.Tech ECE SLI

150 17UCS019 Amol Pratap Singh B.Tech CSE SLI

151 17UEC002 Aayuesh Barui B.Tech ECE SLI

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152 17UCS025 Ankita Shreya Bhattacharya B.Tech CSE SLI

153 17UCC044 Purvi Mandot B.Tech CCE SLI

154 17UCC045 Rachit Kawar B.Tech CCE SLI

155 17UCS002 Abhay Aravinda B.Tech CSE SLI

156 17UCS050 Dev Purohit B.Tech CSE SLI

157 17UCS109 Payal Gattani B.Tech CSE SLI

158 17UCS116 Pulkit Mathur B.Tech CSE SLI

159 17UCS153 Shivang Khandelwal B.Tech CSE SLI

160 17UCS163 Sushanth Gupta B.Tech CSE SLI

161 17UEC034 Ayush Maheshwari B.Tech ECE SLI

162 17UEC115 Shivam Sinha B.Tech ECE SLI

163 17UEC124 Snehal Gupta B.Tech ECE SLI

164 17UME005 Abhinav Gupta B.Tech ME SLI

165 17UME032 Khushboo Rao B.Tech ME SLI

166 17UME040 Naman Jain B.Tech ME SLI

167 17UCS048 Radha Sai Rupesh Ch B.Tech CSE SLI

168 17UCS074 Jaswanth Reddy Tokala B.Tech CSE SLI

169 17UCS159 Sourabh Tripathi B.Tech CSE SLI

170 17UCS044 Bhanu Pratap Singh B.Tech CSE SLI

171 17UEC080 Niharika Singh B.Tech ECE SLI

172 17UEC020 Aniket Tiwary B.Tech ECE SLI

173 17UEC131 Pothineni Kumar B.Tech ECE SLI

174 17UEC066 Kshish Ashish B.Tech ECE SLI

175 17UEC126 Sri Sai Madhu Vinay Chowdary B.Tech ECE SLI

176 17UEC058 Jaladi Srivardhan B.Tech ECE SLI

177 17UCS063 Harshit Bansal B.Tech CSE SLI

178 17UEC075 Naman Mathur B.Tech ECE SLI

179 17UEC099 Rohit Sharma B.Tech ECE SLI

180 17UEC089 Raj Jagetiya B.Tech ECE SLI

181 17UEC120 Shubham Kumar Singhal B.Tech ECE SLI

182 17UCS105 Paridhi Vijay B.Tech CSE SLI

183 17UCS185 Anshu Musaddi B.Tech CSE SLI

184 17UCC012 Aniket Jain B.Tech CCE SLI

185 17UME008 Agraj Agarwal B.Tech ME SLI

186 17UEC137 Yash Bansal B.Tech ECE SLI

187 17UEC033 Ayush Mahajan B.Tech ECE SLI

188 17UCS169 Tarun Singh B.Tech CSE SLI

189 17UCC030 Ketan Agrawal B.Tech CCE SLI

190 17UCS144 Shalini Joshi B.Tech CSE SLI

191 17UCS058 Gautam Bhatia B.Tech CSE SLI

192 17UME031 Kheelan Prashant Kundalia B.Tech ME SLI

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193 17UEC022 Ansh Gupta B.Tech ECE SLI

194 17UCS024 Anish Agarwal B.Tech CSE SLI

195 17UCC068 Vishal Agrawal B.Tech CCE SLI

196 17UEC109 Saransh Bankiwal B.Tech ECE SLI

197 19MCS005 Shrikrishn Bansal MTECH CSE SLI

198 17UME052 Sejal Parwal B.Tech ME SLI

199 17UME011 Aman Nigam B.Tech ME SLI

200 17UCS010 Aditya Rathi B.Tech CSE SLI

201 17UCS007 Abhinav Tiwari B.Tech CSE SLI

202 17UCC038 Nikhil Shrivastava B.Tech CCE SLI

203 17UCS003 Abhay Gupta B.Tech CSE SLI

204 17UCS088 Manthan Vijayvergiya B.Tech CSE SLI

205 17UCC017 Ashutosh Sundriyal B.Tech CCE SLI

206 17UCC028 Jayash Batra B.Tech CCE SLI

207 17UCC046 Rashi Gupta B.Tech CCE SLI

208 17UCC052 Salil Mishra B.Tech CCE SLI

209 17UCS011 Aditya Sharma B.Tech CSE SLI

210 17UCS018 Amitesh Acharya B.Tech CSE SLI

211 17UCS045 Bhaskar Modi B.Tech CSE SLI

212 17UCS071 Hrishik Joshi B.Tech CSE SLI

213 17UCS090 Mohammad Aariz B.Tech CSE SLI

214 17UCS172 Ujjwal Saraswat B.Tech CSE SLI

215 17UEC052 Harsh Baranwal B.Tech ECE SLI

216 17UEC073 Mridul Pandey B.Tech ECE SLI

217 17UEC090 Rishabh Khatri B.Tech ECE SLI

218 17UEC113 Shivam Malviya B.Tech ECE SLI

219 17UEC133 Utkarsh Raj B.Tech ECE SLI

220 17UCC019 Daman Deep Singh B.Tech CCE SLI

221 17UCS167 Taru Ghiya B.Tech CSE SLI

222 17UCS078 Khalid Mehtab Khan B.Tech CSE SLI

223 17UEC011 Abhishek Tiwari B.Tech ECE SLI

224 17UCS131 Ritik Mishra B.Tech CSE SLI

225 17UCS016 Akshit Devpura B.Tech CSE SLI

226 17UCS038 Ashish Kumar B.Tech CSE SLI

227 17UEC039 Chappidi Vishnu VardhanReddy

B.Tech ECE SLI

228 17UCC064 Vaibhav Gupta B.Tech CCE SLI

229 17UCS107 Patel Parth B.Tech CSE SLI

230 17UEC138 Yash Parashar B.Tech ECE SLI

231 17UCS060 Geet Choudhary B.Tech CSE SLI

232 17UCS095 Naman Garg B.Tech CSE SLI

233 17UCS085 Mahiman Bissa B.Tech CSE SLI

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234 17UCC047 Rishabha Sancheti B.Tech CCE SLI

235 17UEC083 Parth Jawalia B.Tech ECE SLI

236 17UCC041 Ojasvi Sharma B.Tech CCE SLI

237 17UCC050 Rohit Munjal B.Tech CCE SLI

238 17UCS014 Akshat Agarwal B.Tech CSE SLI

239 17UCS021 Anant Singhal B.Tech CSE SLI

240 17UCS001 Aayush Mishra B.Tech CSE SLI

241 17UEC077 Naman Tiwari B.Tech ECE SLI

242 17UME047 Saatvik Gupta B.Tech ME SLI

243 17UCC060 Tanmay Gwalera B.Tech CCE SLI

244 17UCC066 Vatsal Malaviya B.Tech CCE SLI

245 17UCS108 Pawan Jain B.Tech CSE SLI

246 17UME004 Abhinav Dhakar B.Tech ME SLI

247 18UME001 Chirag Pareek B.Tech ME SLI

248 19UCS029 Neeraj Kumar Singhal B.Tech CSE SLI

249 20UCS201 Sriraj Behera B.Tech CSE SLI

250 18UCC152 Satvik Jain B.Tech CCE SLI

251 18UEC170 Khushi Mittal B.Tech ECE Summer Internship

252 18UCS016 Manas Singh B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

253 18UCC042 Nirmesh Bansal B.Tech CCE Summer Internship

254 18UEC053 Parth Sharma B.Tech ECE Summer Internship

255 18UCS195 Raghav Chugh B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

256 18UCS211 Divyansh Jain B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

257 18UCS166 Atulya Singh B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

258 18UCS094 Rohit Agrawal B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

259 18UCC108 Rahul Khandelwal B.Tech CCE Summer Internship

260 18UEC027 Naman Rathee B.Tech ECE Summer Internship

261 18UCC165 Lokesh Dulani B.Tech CCE Summer Internship

262 18UCS160 Kshitiz Raj B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

263 18UCS125 Shaswat Kumar B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

264 18UCC161 Vishal Jain B.Tech CCE Summer Internship

265 18UCS196 Tanvin Kalra B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

266 18UCC088 Shubham Kaushik B.Tech CCE Summer Internship

267 18UCS102 Ishita Gupta B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

268 18UEC136 Rahul Yadav B.Tech ECE Summer Internship

269 18UCC111 Sarvagy Mishra B.Tech CCE Summer Internship

270 18UCC017 Pushkar Soni B.Tech CCE Summer Internship

271 18UCS130 Stephen Vincent B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

272 18UCS115 Kashish Jain B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

273 18UCS137 Ajitesh Saxena B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

274 18UCS002 Arishta Jain B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

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275 18UCC112 Mehak Singhal B.Tech CCE Summer Internship

276 18UEC169 Bharat Paliwal B.Tech ECE Summer Internship

277 18UEC159 Krishna Harsora B.Tech ECE Summer Internship

278 18UEC106 Prakhar Agarwal B.Tech ECE Summer Internship

279 17DCS017 Yash Agarwal INTEGRATEDB.Tech-MTECH CSE

Summer Internship

280 18UCS057 Aditya Gupta B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

281 18UCC089 Eshaan Rathi B.Tech CCE Summer Internship

282 18UCC168 Yash Bansal B.Tech CCE Summer Internship

283 18UCC010 Utkarsh Goel B.Tech CCE Summer Internship

284 18UEC184 Rohit Yadav B.Tech ECE Summer Internship

285 18UCC158 Kartikey Sharma B.Tech CCE Summer Internship

286 18UEC110 Vatsal Rai B.Tech ECE Summer Internship

287 18UCS121 Ujjwal Goel B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

288 18UEC144 Manan Kedawat B.Tech ECE Summer Internship

289 18UCC067 Divisha Bapna B.Tech CCE Summer Internship

290 18UCC169 Shivansh Jain B.Tech CCE Summer Internship

291 18UCS019 Priyank Singh B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

292 18UEC016 Anshika Rathore B.Tech ECE Summer Internship

293 18UCC104 Manak Mishra B.Tech CCE Summer Internship

294 18UCS224 Meghal Jain B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

295 18UCS193 Tarun Charan B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

296 18UCS028 Garvit Modi B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

297 18UCS158 Vaibhav Jain B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

298 18UCS107 Vishwas Anil Kumar B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

299 18UCC035 Abhigyan Agarwala B.Tech CCE Summer Internship

300 18UCS100 Nitik Jain B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

301 18UCS127 Divyansh Singh B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

302 18UCC084 Aishwarya Mahapatra B.Tech CCE Summer Internship

303 18UEC086 Dhanush Kumar B.Tech ECE Summer Internship

304 18UCS042 Paridhi Reddy B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

305 18DCS009 Aman Jain B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

306 18UCC134 Nishchay Bhandari B.Tech CCE Summer Internship

307 18UCS213 Naman Indranil B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

308 18UCS096 Mehul Khandelwal B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

309 18UCS169 Rishika Vaish B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

310 18UCS219 Mayank Goyal B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

311 18UCS175 Dushyant Gupta B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

312 18UCC012 Shreshth Bhatt B.Tech CCE Summer Internship

313 18UCS174 Rohan Yadav B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

314 18UCS083 Sanskar Garg B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

315 18UCS117 Priyal Maheshwari B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

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316 18UCC085 Aashish Methani B.Tech CCE Summer Internship

317 18UCC068 Suchitra Saksena B.Tech CCE Summer Internship

318 18UCS215 Siddharth Sharma B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

319 18UEC001 Shelly Gupta B.Tech ECE Summer Internship

320 18UCS018 Garvit Gupta B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

321 18UEC056 Aditya Jhajharia B.Tech ECE Summer Internship

322 18UCC130 Rohit Tayde B.Tech CCE Summer Internship

323 18UCC109 Harshit Gupta B.Tech CCE Summer Internship

324 18UCS177 Tarun Kochar B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

325 18UCC140 Utkarsh Gupta B.Tech CCE Summer Internship

326 18UCC079 Aditya Maharana B.Tech CCE Summer Internship

327 18UCS124 Mohit Agarwal B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

328 18UCC063 Akhil Kashyap B.Tech CCE Summer Internship

329 18UME038 Tushar Agarwal B.Tech ME Summer Internship

330 17DEC005 Shivam Beeyani INTEGRATEDB.Tech-MTECH ECE

Summer Internship

331 18UCS128 Jatin Lakhani B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

332 18UCC040 Harshit Singhal B.Tech CCE Summer Internship

333 18UME063 Dakshya Seekarwar B.Tech ME Summer Internship

334 17DCS009 Priyank Sonkiya INTEGRATEDB.Tech-MTECH CSE

Summer Internship

335 18UCS157 Sanidhya Bhardwaj B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

336 18UCS141 Hemakshi Manchandia B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

337 18UCS225 Akshay Solanki B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

338 18UCC153 Ankit Garg B.Tech CCE Summer Internship

339 18UCS228 Dev Ashish Purohit B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

340 17DCS011 Rahul Pareek INTEGRATEDB.Tech-MTECH CSE

Summer Internship

341 18UCS120 Madhur Mangal B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

342 18UEC032 Yash Toshniwal B.Tech ECE Summer Internship

343 18UCC149 Prerak Mathur B.Tech CCE Summer Internship

344 18UCS048 Rajat Bansal B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

345 18UCS118 Alay Shimpee B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

346 18UCS069 Siddharth Singhvi B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

347 18UCS012 Shivam Mundhra B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

348 18UCS065 Ashwani Mittal B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

349 18UCC022 Shriyans Jain B.Tech CCE Summer Internship

350 18UCS109 Avish Porwal B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

351 18UCC127 Darshan Jain B.Tech CCE Summer Internship

352 18UCS132 Lakshay Bhagtani B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

353 18UEC134 Deepesh Alwani B.Tech ECE Summer Internship

354 18UCS043 Aashi Gupta B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

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355 18UCC018 Bharat Agrawal B.Tech CCE Summer Internship

356 18UCS062 Sarvang Jain B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

357 18UCS223 Dhruv Yadav B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

358 18UCS229 Kushagra Chaturvedi B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

359 18UCS072 Pooja Singhal B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

360 18UCC025 Patoliya Abhishek Mukeshbhai B.Tech CCE Summer Internship

361 18DCS017 Anikeit Saxena B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

362 18UCS222 Anirudh Singh B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

363 18UCS090 Jayesh Mandloi B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

364 18UCS216 Harsh Gupta B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

365 18UCS004 Ashutosh Kapoor B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

366 18UCS134 Anurag Gupta B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

367 18UCS095 Vipul Khandelwal B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

368 18UCS151 Naman Mantri B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

369 18UCC082 Jatin Luthra B.Tech CCE Summer Internship

370 18UCS033 Deep Mavani B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

371 18UEC175 Abhinav Modi B.Tech ECE Summer Internship

372 18UCS182 Akshat Jain B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

373 18UCS183 Garvit Jethwani B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

374 18UCC148 Bhavya Goswami B.Tech CCE Summer Internship

375 18UME066 Jahanvi Budania B.Tech ME Summer Internship

376 18UEC009 Rahul Saha B.Tech ECE Summer Internship

377 18UEC002 Apoorv Singh Negi B.Tech ECE Summer Internship

378 18UCC159 Harshit Singhal B.Tech CCE Summer Internship

379 18UCS227 Ayush Rathi B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

380 18UCS045 Akshit Agarwal B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

381 18UCC091 Neeraj Appujani B.Tech CCE Summer Internship

382 17DCS002 Drashti Minesh Modasara INTEGRATEDB.Tech-MTECH CSE

Summer Internship

383 18UCC060 Akshat Garg B.Tech CCE Summer Internship

384 18UCS092 Mohammad Rahim Khan B.Tech CSE Summer Internship

385 18UCC051 Divyanshu Bansal B.Tech CCE Summer Internship

9. CENTRAL FACILITIES9.1. LUCSThe LNM Institute of Information Technology, Jaipur provides extensive computing and networkcommunications services, which are part of the campus infrastructure. Their purpose is to support theInstitute's teaching, research and student learning activities. The Institute has good IT infrastructure. Theentire campus has been duly networked using a three-tier system of connectivity: (a) Three ISP connectivityto connect campus to external digital world (b) Single-mode optical fiber cable based connectivity betweenbuildings within campus, (c) connectivity inside the buildings: wired - CAT -6/6e type of copper cable basedconnectivity and Wi-Fi based WLAN connectivity in the entire academic block including labs, faculty block,Library, guest house selected hostels and shopping complex areas. Access to the Internet is available from any

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connected computing device across the campus in mode of LAN/WAN. The Institute intranet uses athree-layer switched Ethernet network architecture.

Institute has three leased Internet connectivity: 1Gbps through NKN, 1Gbps through Jio and 200Mbps through Reliance Communication.

VoIP and Internal Telephony: The Institute has Enterprise Communication Server with a hybrid gatewayfor VoIP-based Internet Telephony and PSTN connectivity with advanced functionalities like IVR and WebCollaboration.

Video Conferencing: The Institute has two dedicated video conferencing (VC) rooms. Institute also has twoon-demand software based VC setups to facilitate various academic collaborations through interactive lecturesessions which involve remote experts and local audiences.

Audio-Visual facility: All lecture halls and mostly labs are enabled with Audio-Visual (projection) facilitysome with Wi-Fi connectivity.

Network Security: The Institute provides secure wire line as well as wireless (Wi-Fi) based networkservices and enables Internet access in keeping with the Institute's IT Policy. Content-based filtering isemployed for preventing access to undesirable sites and exchange of unauthorized content. This is enabledthrough Checkpoint Unified Threat Management (UTM) firewall that includes Threat Management, IdentityAwareness, Content Awareness, Load-balancing, Gateway Antivirus, AntiBot and URL filtering, Firewall-logprocessing through Checkpoint Management Server. Endpoint devices will also be secure throughcampus-wide Seqrite Quick Heal Protection Antivirus.

Servers & Workstations: The Institute has various servers & workstations for centralized computationalwork and associated services: eight servers to cater various network services like - web, DHCP, LDAP,IBM-Cognos, DB2, Active Directory and SAP Education, one server for library's web services, two servers tocater to the institute’s MIS/ERP services, four workstations for various services like Intranet, Matlab andAntivirus, three storage server for file and data storage.

Centralized High Performance Computing facilities: Institute has an HPC cluster consisting of 140computing cores on 7 nodes and GPU Server (NVIDIA/ K4200 Cards, Multi-Core 2744) to cater research anddevelopment requirements of Students and faculty members. Various software’s running on the HPC includesthe Matlab, Ansys and several compilers.

Centralized NVidia DGX-1: Institute has an NVidia DGX-1 consisting of Dual 20-core Intel Xeon e5-2698v4 2.2GHz, 512 GB RAM, 256GB GPU Memory, 8 x GPUs (Tesla V100), Cuda Cores: (5000 per GPU), TensorCores: (600 per GPU), Storage: (4 x 1.92 TB SSD RAID 0) to cater research and development requirements (AIand Data Science Research) of Students and faculty members.

Learning Management System: The Institute has been using several learning and collaborationplatforms. These include learning management systems like Moodle and Google Classroom including onlinelecture delivery, quizzes, assessment and notifications. In addition, a few faculty members use collaborationplatforms like Piazza. Institute is also using blended learning and flipped classrooms to enhance learningexperience.

Video Surveillance System: The Institute has robust surveillance system for video surveillance of theLNMIIT Campus including Monitoring Room with a Video Wall.

Other Network-based Services: In addition to the services listed above, the Institute also providesAuthentication Services, E-Mail Services, Directory Services, Printing Services, File Transfer Services,Quota-based Storage Services, select Security Surveillance Services, etc.

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Power Backup: Dedicated 30 KVA Online UPS for server room and 60 KVA Online UPS for Computing Nodesin various laboratories in Academic Area.

Academic Software’s: MATLAB Campus, Microsoft Office 365, Windows update, Globarena Multimedia,Solidworks, LabVIEW, Multisim and other academic software.

LUCS Data Centre

9.2 Central LibraryThe central library is the heart of the Institute. It is the most lively place in the campus providing a safe,comfortable, and friendly environment that enables learning and advancement of knowledge. It is designed tocater to the information needs of the LNMIIT community, provides services and facilities to meet therequirements and objectives of the Institute and bridge the gap in teaching and learning.

The central Library of the Institute is fully automated and equipped with the anti-theft security system. Itboasts of 19845+ text and reference books, 130+ e-books, subscription of 65 national and internationalperiodicals, and about 48,160+ e-journals which are accessible through subscribed database. Library hasestablished a network and co- operative arrangement with many resourceful libraries and consortia, e.g.,INFLIBNET, Gandhinagar; Indian Institute of Technology, Gandhinagar; Developing Library Network(DELNET), New Delhi; Indian Association of Special Libraries and Information Centers (IASLIC), Kolkata. Thelibrary also holds the institutional membership of National Digital Library of India, the platform whichprovides access to 10,048,671 multiple learning resource types in terms of books, articles, thesis, audio andvideo lectures, manuscripts, reports, etc.

Library is serving different sections of users like UG, PG, research scholars, faculty and staff and extending thesupport to the institutional libraries and institutes in the region. Library has experimented and deployedvarious open-source technologies for managing the library functions and operations. Library has created anInstitutional repository on Open-Source software "D Space" which serves as a platform for accessing thescholarly contents generated by LNMIIT community; these include, thesis, BTP reports, book chapters,journal articles, conference papers, presentations, and other intellectual capital items of the Institute likegazette, media and news coverage etc. The repository contains the metadata and abstracts of publications andis accessible on the campus network. The platform provides a way to manage scholarly content andpublications and give them greater visibility and accessibility over time.

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Library offers and caters to the various services of the LNMIIT community and connects with the users andupdates them on various tools and platforms. The library arranged several technical and awareness programsfor the users from time to time during the year.

Seminars/ Online Sessions Conducted by the library in the Academic Year 2020-21

Sr. No. Name of the events/ workshop/ seminar etc. Date

1 Invited talk on “Good Practices for High Quality Publishing inInternational Journals’

9 October 2021

2 Virtual Book Exhibition and Selection(VBEAAS) 2021 1-10 October 2021

3 One Stop Federated Solution to Literature Search 21 September 2021

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4 Webinar on “Smart Libraries for Amazing users” commemoratingRanganathan Birth Anniversary

12 August 2021

5 Sharing of Best Practices- Followed in other reputed organisations 2 July 2021

6 An Online Awareness program Author Cafe 23 June 2021

7 Author Writing IEEE Session 4 June 2021

8 Online training session -How to access Pearson e-library 28 May 2021

9 Online Training Session - IEEE Xplore ASPP – Delivering researchbetter than ever

8 May 2021

10 Online Training session on the ‘Turnitin Plagiarism platform’ 13 April 2021

11 Online -Invited talk on “Understanding & Avoiding Plagiarism” 6 March 2021

12 Online Training Session on the 'Use of Web of Science in Research’ 3 March 2021

13 Decoding the Predatory Journal Menace 18 February 2021

14 Online Training Session on ‘Grammarly Platform’ 10 February 2021

15 Invited talk on “Enhancing User Experience through Technology inAcademic Libraries: A Practical approach”

3 February 2021

16 Online Training session -Unlock your research potential with IEEEXplore

30 January 2021

9.3. MessThe Institute has three different common mess for 2100 students (appx) serving meals for four times in a daynamely breakfast, lunch, snacks and dinner. All mess are air-cooled and well equipped to cater to thestudents’ needs in an efficient manner. Nutritious food is served which is decided by the elected student body‘COSHA’ based on students' feedback and implemented through the Warden’s committee. Jain food andspecial food during the fast is also provided in the mess. Once in a month, the mess organises a speciallunch/dinner. To ensure proper hygiene and quality control, all the messes are inspected periodically withCOSHA members.

The mess is following all the norms related to Covid safety like hand wash availability, restricted number ofstudents, staggering, social distancing etc. The dining area is well sanitized before and after the meals.

9.4. Shopping ComplexTo fulfill the day-to-day needs of the campus residents, a mini shopping complex is in place which includesstationery shop, Amul parlour, laundry shop, salon, juice shop, departmental store and two restaurants.

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9.5. Transportation ServicesThe Institute has three buses which ply between Jaipur city and the campus at regular intervals every day.The campus residents also have access to the low floor bus of Rajasthan State Road Transport Corporation tocommute to and from the city.

9.6. Medical UnitThe Institute has a well-equipped medical unit. It has a resident doctor, three resident nurses and othersupport staff. The medical unit boasts of an emergency care section, physiotherapy unit, ambulance service,and tie-up with a nearby advanced hospital for immediate referral/treatment. Frequent visits of specializeddoctors are arranged throughout the year. The Institute also facilitates a group medical insurance policy forall its students, staff & faculty. The details of all the activities organized by the medical centre during the lastfive academic years (2016-17 to 2020-21) are mentioned below.

Activities by LNMIIT Medical Unit

Sr. No. Name of Activity Date Venue Name & details of ExternalExperts/ Consultants invited

1 Free medicaladvice camp

21 January 2020 Medical unit Rungta superspeciality hospitaland nirog club

1. Orthopedician2. Neurophysician

2 Blood donationcamp

15 November 2019 Medical unit SDMH Blood Bank, Nirog Club andLions Club

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3 Heart awareness 23 September 2019 Medical unit Narayana multispeciality hospitalDr. Rahul Sharma (cardiologist)

4 Free surgerycamp

04 November 2019 Student activitycentre

Mobile surgical unit1. Gynecologist2. ENT Surgeon3. Ophthalmologist4. General Surgeon5. Orthopedician

5 Free dental camp 18-19 February 2019 Medical unit Smile express dental unit

6 Blood donationcamp

01 September 2019 Student activitycentre

Nirog club, sdmh blood bank andlions club

7 Basic life supporttraining session

21 December 2018 Lt-5 Fortis multispeciality hospital

9 Free surgicalcamp

06 September 2017 Guest house Mobile surgical unit

10 Blood donationcamp

02 July 2016 Sport complex Nirog club and lions club

10. CAMPUS INFRASTRUCTUREThe LNMIIT is a 100-acre green campus, which is at par with the best technological institutions in thecountry. It possesses IT-enabled classrooms, well-equipped laboratories, a rich central library, and othermodern amenities. Some of the key highlights of LNMIIT infrastructure are the following.

10.1. Housing FacilitiesThe institute provides accommodation to its academic and administrative staffs. There are 55 houses insidethe campus and 12 houses outside the campus. The on-campus accommodation includes Director house,general apartments, studio apartments, and Type B, C, D, and E housing facilities for both the teaching andnon-teaching staffs. Additionally, an off-campus facility named Balaji Vihar is provided to the faculties andstaffs just outside the campus. The details are mentioned below.

Housing Facility

Sr. No. Residence Type Category ofResidents

Quarter Type Number ofQuarters

1 Director House Director On-Campus 1

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2 Type B Faculty On-Campus 4

3 Type C Faculty On-Campus 4

4 Type D Faculty and Staff On-Campus 12

5 Type E Staff On-Campus 6

6 Type III Apartment (FF) Staff On-Campus 2

7 Type III Apartment (GF) Staff On-Campus 2

8 Type III Apartment (SF) Staff On-Campus 2

9 Studio Apartment Faculty and Staff On-Campus 22

10 Balaji Vihar Faculty and Staff Off-Campus 12

Total 67

10.2. Academic AreaThere are 19 air-cooled lecture halls equipped with multimedia facilities, and with virtual teaching/ learningaids. Additionally, there are seminar halls which are used as mini auditoriums and the institute also has anopen-air theatre used as an auditorium. In addition, 400+ capacity multi-utility hall is also available as part ofthe student activity centre. The institute has 32 state-of-the-art laboratories having latest technologyequipment. To name a few, these are Electronics Lab, Microwave and Optical Communication Lab, DigitalSignal Processing Lab, Computer Lab, Communication Lab, Electrical Characterization Division, MaterialsSynthesis Division, Advanced Instrumentation Division, DI Water Plant, Physics Lab, CAD Lab, Graphics Lab.

Laboratory and Lecture Hall

Sr. No. Location/ Building Level Room Id/Name

Room Type Area ofRoom in

sqm

1 AID Lab Under Graduate 1052 AdditionalWorkshop

44.12

2 MSSD Lab Under Graduate 1053 AdditionalWorkshop

44.12

3 Texas Instrument Lab Under Graduate 1073 Laboratory 73.68

4 Computer Lab – 1 Under Graduate 1090-91-92 Laboratory 208.46

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5 PG Research lab Post Graduate 1093 ResearchLaboratory

62.09

6 Basic Electronics Lab Under Graduate 1095 Laboratory 146.33

7 Hydraulics Lab Under Graduate 1130 Laboratory 105.91

8 CAD Lab / EngineeringDesign Lab (FEM)

Under Graduate 1131 Laboratory 105.91

9 ECD Lab Under Graduate 2019 AdditionalWorkshop

9.42

10 UG Physics Lab Under Graduate 2051 Laboratory 136.74

11 Optics Lab Under Graduate 2062 Laboratory 53.23

12 M.Sc. Lab 1 Under Graduate 2063 AdditionalWorkshop

53.23

13 PG Research Lab Post Graduate 2073 Laboratory 73.68

14 DSP Lab Under Graduate 2081 Laboratory 70.31

15 ECAD Lab Under Graduate 2083 Laboratory 70.31

16 Computer Lab – 2 Under Graduate 2091 Laboratory 208.46

17 ADC Lab Under Graduate 2093 Laboratory 103.22

18 Microwave Lab Under Graduate 2095 Laboratory 103.22

Under Graduate 2095-A Laboratory 103.22

Under Graduate 2095-B Laboratory 103.22

19 Robotics Lab Under Graduate 2130 AdditionalWorkshop

52.64

20 Mechatronics SystemDesign Lab (NI Lab)

Under Graduate 2131 Laboratory 103.4

21 Automotives PowerTransmission System Lab

Under Graduate 3120 Laboratory 104.4

22 PES Lab / Meteorology,Instrumentation &Control Lab

Under Graduate 3121 Laboratory 104.34

23 Engineering Graphics Lab Under Graduate 3130 Drawing Hall 157.63

24 Seminar Hall-3 (A/cMeeting Room)

Under Graduate A/C MEETINGROOM

Seminar Hall 15.98

25 Seminar Hall – 6 (AlumniOffice)

Under Graduate ALUMNIOFFICE

Seminar Hall 40.47

26 Seminar Hall-2 (BoardRoom)

Under Graduate BOARD ROOM Seminar Hall 42.43

27 Computer IntegratedManufacturing Lab(CIM Lab)

Under Graduate CIM Laboratory 104.48

28 Computer Lab – 3 Under Graduate CP-3 Laboratory 357.91

29 Mechanical Workshop &Metallography Lab

Under Graduate HANGER Workshop 166.63

30 Heat Transfer Lab Under Graduate HT LAB Laboratory 77.96

31 IC Engine Lab Under Graduate ICE Laboratory 56

32 Incubation Lab - I Under Graduate INCL-I Laboratory 246

33 Incubation Lab - II Under Graduate INCL-II Laboratory 124

34 Incubation Lab - III Under Graduate INCL-III Laboratory 246

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35 Kinematics andDynamics Lab

Under Graduate KD LAB Laboratory 76.51

36 Lecture Hall - 1 Under Graduate LH-1 Classroom 244.3

37 Lecture Hall - 10 Under Graduate LH-10 Classroom 244.3

38 Lecture Hall - 11 Under Graduate LH-11 Classroom 104.4

40 Lecture Hall - 13 Under Graduate LH-13 Classroom 104.4

41 Lecture Hall - 14 Under Graduate LH-14 Classroom 55

42 Lecture Hall - 15 Under Graduate LH-15 Classroom 55

43 Lecture Hall - 16 Under Graduate LH-16 Tutorial Room 105

44 Lecture Hall - 17 Under Graduate LH-17 Classroom 246.5

45 Lecture Hall - 18 Under Graduate LH-18 Classroom 246.5

46 Lecture Hall - 19 Under Graduate LH-19 Classroom 246.5

47 Lecture Hall - 2 Under Graduate LH-2 Classroom 244.3

48 Lecture Hall - 20 Under Graduate LH-20 Classroom 183.7

49 Lecture Hall - 3 Post Graduate LH-3 Classroom 107.2

50 Lecture Hall - 4 Post Graduate LH-4 Classroom 107.2

51 Lecture Hall - 5 Under Graduate LH-5 Tutorial Room 107.2

52 Lecture Hall - 6 Under Graduate LH-6 Classroom 107.2

53 Lecture Hall - 7 Under Graduate LH-7 Classroom 107.2

54 Lecture Hall - 8 Under Graduate LH-8 Classroom 107.2

55 Lecture Hall - 9 Under Graduate LH-9 Classroom 244.3

56 Lecture Hall - 12 Post Graduate LH-12 Classroom 104.4

61 Seminar Hall-5 (Library) Under Graduate LIBRARY HALL Seminar Hall 9.61

62 Seminar Hall-4(Mechanical Hall)

Under Graduate MECH. HALL Tutorial Room 19.55

63 MME Project/Researchlab

Post Graduate MME-PG ResearchLaboratory

157.26

64 PG Seminar Room Under Graduate PG SEMINARROOM

Tutorial Room 73.68

65 Project Lab Under Graduate PROJECT LAB Workshop 130

66 MechatronicsCharacterization Lab(SOM Lab)

Under Graduate SOM Laboratory 56

67 Thermal Engineering Lab Under Graduate TE LAB Laboratory 66.3

68 Seminar Hall-1(VC Room)

Under Graduate VC ROOM Seminar Hall 44.12

69 Distillation Plant Post Graduate ACADEMICBLOCK

Laboratory

Sr. No. Academic Facility Quantity

1 Classroom 18

2 Drawing Hall 1

3 Laboratory 29

4 Research Laboratory 2

5 Seminar Hall 5

6 Tutorial Room 4

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7 Workshop 2

8 Additional Workshop 5

Total 66

Resource Centres

● IBM Laboratory with industry standard tools for Big Data Analytics, and Mobile ApplicationDevelopment tools like Cognos Insight, InfoSphere Biginsight, Worklight.

● National Instruments (NI) laboratory with myRIO, cR10, and sbRIO hardware, along with a widerange of sensors and actuators for research and robotic applications.

● Texas Instruments (TI) laboratory with the latest kits including Beaglebone Black, D8500, TIVA andAtmel Dragon Board Xmega, and Raspberry Pi Boards.

● 140-core High Performance Computing (HPC) facility by HP for research purposes. High-end tools forModelling, Design, and Simulation, which includes ANSYS, Adams and Vi-Rail.

● High-speed internet, including Wi-Fi in academic area and LAN connectivity in hostel rooms.● Mechanical Workshop with conventional workshops and laboratories and NC-CNC machines and

robots.

10.3. Guest HouseThe institute has an on-campus guest house facility for the prospective guests who arrive at the campus foracademic and administrative purposes. The guest house has 14 rooms on two floors. The ground floor has 8rooms and the first floor has 6 rooms, including two suite rooms. Each room is provided with basic amenitiessuch as a refrigerator, television, air conditioning, and geyser along with other important necessities requiredfor the stay at the campus. Additionally, the guest house has water coolers, a dining hall and a kitchen for theremarkable arrangement of food for the guests.

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10.4. ATMLNMIIT has an on-campus ICICI bank ATM to facilitate its students and staff for withdrawal of money. Thisfacility is available at the entrance of the main building.

11. MULTI-DISCIPLINARY CENTRES FOR RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT

11.1. Centre for Next Generation Communication and Networking (C-NGCN)

Center Lead : Prof. Ranjan GangopadhyayCo-Lead : Dr. Nikhil Sharma

About UsLNMIIT has taken a bold and unique initiative by establishing various centres of excellence dealing withseveral cutting-edge research areas. One such centre is the “Centre for Next Generation Communicationand Networking (C-NGCN)” in the Department of ECE. It is a multi-disciplinary Centre working at theintersection of Communication Technology, Radio Physics and Computer Science mainly focusing on xGWireless Systems and Networks, Software Defined Networking and Wireless Data Analytics.

Through this centre, a strong team comprising interested/ involved faculty, research scholars, andstudents is being developed for interactive, jointly steered and highly coordinated research efforts toundertake next generation challenges in the converged areas of Communication, Computing andNetworking.

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VisionLeading research and development in next-generation wireless communication and networking,pioneering new concepts, technologies and applications for better living experiences.

MissionThe Centre will pursue the immediate challenges of 5G communication and networking that would berequired for niche applications such as D2D, M2M, V2V, V2X along with IoE in relation to SDN enabled 5G.

The C-Ngcn Focuses OnSponsored research and creation of software/ hardware research laboratory for xG CommunicationNetworks. Development of new elective courses on relevant topics, such as, 5G Wireless, SDN, MassiveMIMO, mm-wave Techniques, etc. Conducting workshops on "Emerging Technologies for Next-Generation5G".

Ongoing Research1. Cooperative D2D Communication for 5G2. Optical Wireless including Visible Light Communication3. Green RF Amplifier Design and mm Wave Technology4. Assistive Technologies for Elderly Persons5. Data Analytics for Wireless Resource Optimization6. Intra-body Communication7. Multihop Routing in UAV-assisted FANETs8. Intelligent Reflecting Surfaces for Efficient Wireless Communication9. Providing research push in the forthcoming area of 6G communication

Research Collaborations1. Prof. Abhirup Das barman, Institute of Radio Physics, Kolkata University2. Prof. Hwang-Cheng Wang, National Ilan University, Taiwan3. Dr. Rocco Giofre, University of Roma Tor Vergata, Italy4. Prof Shankar Prakriya, IIT Delhi5. Prof. Parul Garg, NSIT, Delhi6. Dr. Sangram Ganguly, CTO, Rhombus Power Inc, San Jose, California, USA7. Prof. Marc Flanagan, Department of EE, University College, Dublin, Ireland

Outcome And Outreach ActivitiesResearch OutcomesPhD Thesis submitted

Name Monika Jain

Title Performance Improvement of Cognitive Radio Systems through AdvancedSpectrum Sensing, Interference Management and Modulation Techniques

Ongoing PhD Research

Sr. No. Names of Scholars Research Topics (Tentative)

1 Aditya Singh Sengar D2D Communication

2 Bhupendra Sharma Intelligent Surface Assisted Communication

3 Monika Jain NOMA Assisted Wireless Communication

4 Rahul Kumar Garg Miniaturized Ultra-wideband MicrostripAntenna Design

5 Rahul Makkar Cooperative Communication

6 Sandhya Soni Cooperative Communication

7 Shweta Saboo Gesture Recognition

8 Payal Mittal Multihop routing for UAV-assisted networks

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9 Sameeksha Chaudhary Energy harvesting for Intra-bodycommunication

M.Tech. Thesis Completed

Name Monica Verma (Pursuing PhD at IIIT Delhi)

Title Intelligent Channel Learning Exploiting Practical Energy Harvesting forMulti-antenna Systems

Outreach Activities1. Dr. A. Agarwal delivered an invited Talk in AICTE sponsored STTP on Artificial Intelligence & 5G

Communication Technology on 12th December 2020 at Poornima University, Jaipur.2. A virtual talk on "Photonics for 5G Wireless Communication and Surveillance" was organized by

C-NGCN on Feb. 19, 2021. Speaker of the talk: Prof. Antonella Bogoni, Scuola Superiore Sant’Anna,Pisa, Italy.

3. A virtual talk on "Recent Trends and Innovation in Drone Technology" was organized by C-NGCNon Jan. 23, 2021. Speaker of the talk: Mr. Arun Jaye Prakash, Director & CEO, AviocianTechnologies Pvt. Ltd. New Delhi.

4. Organized the “Workshop on IMT 2020 Radio Interface Technologies” at 5G World Forum, 10September 2020, Bangalore, India.

5. Prof R. Gangopadhyay delivered a Talk “Enabling Techniques for 5G-the New Radio:” at theSTTP Workshop at Purnima Engineering College on 31 October 2020

6. Dr Divyang Rawal delivered a keynote talk on “Theoretical framework of NOMA assisted5G/IOT/Massive Machine Networks” on 16th Sept., 2020, TEQIP, Poornima University, Jaipur,India.

PublicationsJournals

1. O. J. Pandey, V. Gautam, S. Jha, M. K. Shukla, and R. M. Hegde, “Time Synchronized Node LocalizationUsing Optimal H-Node Allocation in a Small World WSN,” IEEE Communications Letters, vol. 24, no.11, pp. 2579-2583, Nov. 2020.

2. Q. Wang, H. N. Dai, X. Li, M. K. Shukla, M. Imran, “Artificial Noise Aided Scheme to SecureUAV-assisted Internet of Things with Wireless Power Transfer,” Elsevier Computer Communications,Vol. 164, Dec. 2020, pp. 1-12, DOI: 10.1016/j.comcom.2020.09.017.

3. M. Jain, N. Sharma, A. Gupta, D. Rawal and P. Garg, "Performance Analysis of NOMA AssistedUnderwater Visible Light Communication System," in IEEE Wireless Communications Letters, vol. 9,no. 8, pp. 1291-1294, Aug. 2020, doi: 10.1109/LWC.2020.2988887.

4. M. Jain, N. Sharma, A. Gupta, D. Rawal and P. Garg, “NOMA assisted underwater visible lightcommunication system with full-duplex cooperative relaying,” in Elsevier VehicularCommunications, Vol. 31, May 2021, 100359, doi: 10.1016/j.vehcom.2021.100359.

5. M. Jain, N. Sharma, A. Gupta, D. Rawal and P. Garg, "Performance Analysis of NOMA Assisted MobileAd Hoc Networks for Sustainable Future Radio Access," in IEEE Transactions on SustainableComputing, vol. 6, no. 2, pp. 347-357, June 2021, doi: 10.1109/TSUSC.2020.2987427.

6. R. Makkar, A. Gupta, D. Rawal and N. Sharma, “Spectrally efficient Mary QAM based multi-antennacooperative system over TWDP fading channel” in WILEY Transaction on EmergingTelecommunications Technologies, May 2021.

7. D. Rawal, N. Sharma, A. Gupta and R. Makkar, “Performance Analysis of LRS-OSIC Detection Methodfor Uplink NOMA,” in WILEY International Journal of Communication Systems, May 2021(accepted).

8. P Karmakar, RV Rajakumar, and R Roy, “A Survey on Energy EfficientCellular Mobile Communication”, Wireless Personal Communications, 120(2), 1475-1500, DOI10.1007/s11277-021-08520-1.

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Conference Papers1. S. Karmakar, D. Gautam, and P. Karmakar, “Modeling and Predictions of COVID-19 Spread in India”,

International Conference on Machine Vision & Augmented Intelligence (MAI - 2021), IIITDM Jabalpur,February, 2021.

2. K. Yadav, A. Lamba, D. Gupta, A. Gupta, P. Karmakar, Sandeep Saini, “Bi-LSTM and ensemble basedbilingual sentiment analysis for a code-mixed hindi-english social media text”, IEEE 17th IndiaCouncil International Conference (INDICON), December, 2020,DOI: 10.1109/INDICON49873.2020.9342241.

3. T. Vijay, A. Chawla, B. Dhanka and P. Karmakar, "Sentiment Analysis on COVID-19 Twitter Data,"2020 5th IEEE International Conference on Recent Advances and Innovations in Engineering(ICRAIE), 2020, pp. 1-7, December, 2020, DOI: 10.1109/ICRAIE51050.2020.9358301.

4. R. Makkar, V. Kotha, M. S. Kumari, D. Rawal, V. K. Chakka, and N. Kumar. "Performance of DownlinkSISO NR System using MMSE-IRC Receiver" in 2020 IEEE 3rd 5G World Forum (5GWF), pp. 619-624.October, 2020.

5. A. S. Sengar, R. Gangopadhyay, and S. Debnath. "Interference Modelling for an Underlay D2DNetwork for Efficient Resource Allocation" in 2020 IEEE 3rd 5G World Forum (5GWF), pp. 572-577,October, 2020.

6. K. Yadav, A. Lamba, D. Gupta, A. Gupta, P. Karmakar and S. Saini, "Bilingual Sentiment Analysis for aCode-mixed Punjabi English Social Media Text," 2020 5th International Conference on Computing,Communication and Security (ICCCS), 2020, pp. 1-5, October, 2020,DOI: 10.1109/ICCCS49678.2020.9277309.

7. M. Jain, N. Sharma, A. Gupta, D. Rawal and P. Garg, "Performance Analysis of DF Relaying AssistedUnderwater Visible Light Communication System," 2020 International Conference on SignalProcessing and Communications (SPCOM), August 2020, pp. 1-5, doi:10.1109/SPCOM50965.2020.9179631.

8. A. Agarwal and D. Mishra, “Altitude Optimization for DF Relaying Trajectory of UAV in CooperativeFANET,” in IEEE Global Communication Conf. (GLOBECOM-2020), pp. 1-6, August 2020, DOI:10.1109/GLOBECOM42002.2020.9322461.

9. A. Jhawar, V. Munjal, S. Ranjan, and P. Karmakar, "Social Network based Sentiment and NetworkAnalysis to Predict Elections", IEEE Connect, Bangalore, India, July 2-4 (Virtual), July, 2020,DOI: 10.1109/CONECCT50063.2020.9198574.

Book Chapters

1. S. Karmakar, D. Gautam and P. Karmakar, “Modeling and Predictions of COVID-19 Spread in India”,Machine Vision and Augmented Intelligence—Theory and Applications, Editor: Manish KumarBajpai, Koushlendra Kumar Singh, George Giakos, Springer Singapore, Ed-1, ISBN978-981-16-5077-2.

2. Qubeijian Wang, Hong-Ning Dai, Qiu Wang, and Mahendra K. Shukla, On UAV-assisted DataAcquisition for Underwater IoT in Aquaculture Surveillance, Developments in Maritime Technologyand Engineering, 1st Edition, First Published 2021, CRC Press, London, eBook ISBN:9781003216599. DOI: 10.1201/9781003216599, May 2021.

Project Grants1. Title: Multimodal User Interface for Assisting Elderly People in Indoor Environment

Funding Agency: DST under SEED

Amount: 32.20 Lakhs

Area: Digital Image Processing

2. Title: Energy Efficient RF/VLC Networks for IoT Applications

Funding Agency: SERB (Core Research Grant Scheme)

Amount granted: 36 Lakhs; Area: Wireless Communication

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Project Submitted

1. On behalf of C-NGCN an India-Italy bilateral project titled “Innovative multi-functional on-chipLiDAR for extensive and heterogeneous monitoring in agrifood sector from the field to theprocessing stages - AGRILiDAR” has been submitted to DST-SERB (F. No.INT/ITALY/SR/2021/47) in April, 2021 which is under review and final processing.

2. On behalf of CNGCN a project under CRG scheme titled, “Smart Paradigm for Industry 4.0 andVehicular Networks” has been submitted to DST-SERB in March 2021 which is under review.

3. On behalf of CNGCN a project under CRG scheme titled, “Prototype Hardware Development of5G NR wireless modem” has been submitted to DST-SERB in March 2021 which is under review.

11.2. Centre for Machine Learning and Big Data Analytics (CML-BDA)

Center Lead : Dr. Subrat Kumar DashCo-Lead: Dr. Sakthi Balan Muthiah

Objectives❏ Centre for Machine Learning and Big Data Analytics (CML-BDA) is set up with a vision to be a

sustainable centre of excellence in terms of research, innovation, development and new venturecreation in Machine Learning, Big Data, Business Analytics, Information Retrieval and associatedareas.

❏ It is focused on quality research and development through a multi-disciplinary and collaborativeapproach.

❏ Current thrust areas of work include ML algorithms for Big data analytics, Social media analytics,Social behavior analysis, Real-time event identification and Issues in a smart city environment.

Seminars organized

Date Speaker Topic16 July 2021 Yash Vekaria (16UCS221) (PhD Scholar,

University of California Davis)Differential Tracking Across TopicalWebpages of Indian News Media

18 June 2021 Vibhor Agarwal (16UCS209) Under the Spotlight: Web Tracking inIndian Partisan News Websites

27 October2020

Prof. Nishanth Sastry, University ofSurrey, UK

Socialising and Learning with Machines

17 October2020

Dr. Kannan Balaji, Director, Nielsen(USA)

Machine Learning Applications inBusinesses: Some Use-cases

11.3. Centre for Energy and Environmental Studies: (CEES)

Center Lead : Dr. Kamal Kishore Khatri

About

The LNMIIT is pleased to announce the creation of Centre for Energy and Environmental Studies(CEES) as part of its select focused sustainable innovation- enablement and technology- basedopportunity creation initiatives having potential to enable early as well as long term benefits tocampus, society and the nation. Dr. Kamal Kishore Khatri has been chosen to spearhead thisCentres as first centre lead of the Centre.

The CEES shall primarily work toward identification of key energy-specific monitoring,transformation and management as well as environment specific societal and business needs thatrequired technology-based solution that campus, state, and the nation may have. It would, in aprioritized phase-wise manner, pick up work on creation of innovative and cost effectingtechnology-based scalable solution, IP creation and, where feasible and relevant technology transfer.

Focus areas of the centre would include energy conservation and management, green tech, waterconservation and management, waste water treatment technologies, renewable energy like solar,

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wind, biomass etc. Existing Biogas plant and Sewage treatment plant of the institute are productionand research laboratories of the centre.

The CEES would be encouraged to become an innovation, research technology development, skilldevelopment, consulting and outreach hub around which not only the LNMIIT but also many otherinstitutions in the vicinity (or even beyond) might get enabled over the years.

The CEES would have a mandate of evolving into a centre of excellence in terms of entrepreneurialleadership innovation, development and new venture creation in the relevant area of expertise of theinstitute and its collaborators. It would have CENTRE-LEAD, a nucleus and the Centre teamcomprising of interested/involved faculty, scholar, student and staff. It would initially start a virtualorganisation but over a period of time (in about a year or two) would have physical presence oncampus.

The Centre –Lead would select his own team and create a vision document alongside a roadmapwithin the first quarter of its operation which would be published at the centre’s website.

Vision

1. To play a leading role in capacity building, technology development and dissemination in thefield of Energy and environment studies.

Mission

1. To provide technological solutions in the field of energy and environment by utilizing theexpertise of the internal team and collaborating with outside experts.

2. To create intellectual property through innovations, quality research publications, andpatents in the field of energy and environment.

Objectives

1. To create innovation based technological solutions in the field of energy and environment forthe industry and society.

2. To develop capacity building and help develop sustainable campus w.r.t. resources e.g. energy,water and other environmental issues etc.

3. To disseminate the technologies developed to the masses through IP creation, technologytransfer, creating awareness by conducting seminars, workshops etc.

4. To become a hub of facility in the field of energy and environment and help other nearbyinstitutions to grow on similar fronts.

Team

Dr. Kamal Kishore Khatri (Lead)

Prof. K.K. KHATRI, Professor (Mechanical-Mechatronics EngineeringDepartment), LNMIIT has taken a bold and unique initiative by establishingvarious centres of excellence dealing with several cutting-edge research areas.He has been involved in some internal and external sponsored projects and hehas developed few technologies for waste (including food waste) to energy,smart hybrid energy systems for wastewater treatment plants etc. for whichpatents have been registered. Recently he coordinated one project winning 1stWater conservation award 2019 for the institute organized by the Indian GreenBuilding Council (IGBC). He has completed one sponsored project funded byMNRE, Govt. of India on developing a green campus at the LNMIIT and another proposal has beenrecommended by the Department of Biotechnology (DBT), Govt. of India. Currently he is leading one

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interdisciplinary Centre named Centre for Energy and Environmental Studies (CEES) under whichdifferent multidisciplinary projects are going on which includes development of solid fuel, hybridalternative fuels for dual fuel engine system, hybrid waste water treatment technologies, Biogasenrichment processes etc.

Research Interest: Renewable energy, Alternative fuels for IC Engines, generation/Tri-generation/multi-generation technologies, Solid waste management, Waste water treatment technologies,Modeling of Thermal systems, Biogas plant technologies etc. Through this, a strong team comprisinginterested/ involved faculty, research scholars, and students is being developed for interactive, jointlysteered and highly coordinated research efforts to undertake next generation challenges in theconverged areas of Energy & Environmental, Alternative Solid / Liquid Fuel.

Other members:

Dr. Vikram SharmaAssociate Professor, MME

Faculty Member

Mr. Sanjay GuptaSocial Activist

External Member

Dr. A. B. GuptaProfessor, MNIT, Jaipur

Mentor/Advisor

Prof. Rajan KumarExternal Nucleus

Mentor

Dr. Narendra KhatriAlumnus-LNMIITExternal Member

Mr. Sandeep Kumar SaxenaTechnical Superintendent,

MMEStaff Member

Dr. Praveen Kumar Sharma, Assistant Professor, MMEHead, Numerical & Simulation Wing under CEES

Mr. Tej Bahadur YadavJunior Technician, MME

Staff Member

Mr. Mandeep SinghResearch Scholar, MME

Student Member

Mr. Shiv Prakash DadhichResearch Scholar, MME

Student Member

Mr. Rajnish MaithaniResearch Scholar, MME

Student Member

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Awards And Achievements From Past Years

Patent

1. K. K. Khatri, Narendra Khatri, “An Improved Hybrid Energy Generation System for WastewaterTreatment Plants”, Awarded on 1 January 2020; Patent no.: 328791; application no.20161101693

Awards And Achievements

This award function was organized by the CII-IGBC (Indian Green Building Council) to promote theconservation of energy and water. The LNMIIT was awarded with 1st Water Conservation awardunder the Institute category for achieving water conservation in its campus through innovativetechniques especially through waste water treatment technology. Project was done under theleadership of Dr. Kamal Kishore Khatri and the members involved in the team were Mr. NarendraKhatri (Ph.D Scholar), Mr. Sandeep Kumar Saxena (Senior Lab Technician), Mr. Dinesh Rajput (CivilEngineer), Mr. Raghuvir Gurjar (Biogas Operator) and Mr. Durga Prasad (Electrician). The award wasreceived by Prof. Rahul Banerjee, the Director and Dr. Kamal Kishore Khatri, Associate Professorand Coordinator in the event scheduled on March 15th, 2019 during IGBC Jaipur meet at the Hotel JaiMahal Palace, Jaipur. Mr. D. B. Gupta, Chief Secretary- Govt. of Rajasthan was the chief guest of thefunction. Shri D B Gupta, Chief Secretary, Govt of Rajasthan presented the award in presence of Mr VSuresh, Chairman, IGBC and Mr K S Venkatagiri, Executive Director, CII-Sohrabji Godrej GreenBusiness Centre, Hyderabad.

Few Technologies Developed Under The CMS-ES/CEES/MME

1. Improved Biogas plant with low-cost enrichment2. Smart hybrid waste water treatment plant

The team of the Centre has completed one external funded project for development of green campusunder the solar mission of MNRE, Govt. of India and recommended with another project by theDepartment of Biotechnology, New Delhi in the field of hybrid wastewater treatment technologywhich is under processing.

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List Of Projects And Activities

1. Focusing on the missions and thrust research areas, the centre successfully organized anawareness programme towards Alternative Energy Sources. The motivation of theprogramme is to understand the detrimental effects of the fossil fuels towards theenvironment and its remedies. Vitality of various Alternative fuels was discussed during theevent. The performance as well as emission characteristics for conventional and renewablefuels were debated. The Centre also organized a small visit to its Biogas Plant to thedignitaries followed by Lohri celebration and High-Tea.

2. The Centre successfully organized Plant Visits of Faculty and Students of Poornima College ofEngineering, Jaipur under the guidance of Dr. Kamal Kishore Khatri. The construction andworking of our fully functional Biogas Plant were explained to the students as well as facultiesfollowed by queries session.

3. Alternate fuels including Hydrogen generation, storage and conversion into energy (Dr. K KKhatri, students)

4. Proof of concept for smart energy independent WWTP/STP5. Institute awarded with 1st water conservation award by CII-IGBC

Publications

1. Khatri N., Khatri K.K., Sharma A., Artificial Neural Network Modelling of Faecal ColiformRemoval in an Intermittent Cycle Extended Aeration System-Sequential Batch Reactor basedWastewater Treatment Plant, Proceedings of 5th International Conference on RecentAdvancements in Chemical, Energy and Environmental Engineering (RACEEE-2020),Organized by SSN college of Engineering, Chennai

2. Narendra Khatri, Kamal Kishore Khatri, Abhishek Sharma, Enhanced Energy Saving inWastewater Treatment Plant using Dissolved Oxygen Control and Hydrocyclone,Environmental Technology & Innovation (SCI IF = 3.356), Volume 18, 2020, 100678, ISSN2352-1864, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eti.2020.100678

3. Narendra Khatri, Kamal Kishore Khatri, Hydrogen enrichment on diesel engine with biogas indual fuel mode, International Journal of Hydrogen Energy (SCI IF = 4.939), Volume 45, Issue11, 2020, Pages 7128-7140, ISSN 0360-3199,Https://Doi.Org/10.1016/J.Ijhydene.2019.12.167

Awards And Achievements From Academic Year 2020-21

Awards And Achievements

Our team (Dr. Kamal Kishore Khatri, Mr. Mandeep Singh, Mr. Shiv Prakash Dadhich) exhibiting ourinnovative product Automated machine for the production of fuel and other pellets based on Cowdung and Agri-waste materials and Biogas generation & storage in Kamdhenu Deepawali Mahotsav atParamveer Kalla Ji Maharaj Ki Chhatri, Chittorgarh Fort on Thursday, 12 th November 2020 at 04:00PM - 08:00 PM in presence of Chairman- Kamdhenu Ayog, Minister, Govt. of India.

National Thermal Power Corporation Limited, organised a Hackathon to resolve parali problems inIndia entitled “Green Charcoal Hackathon ". Our team (Dr. Kamal Kishore Khatri, Mr. Shiv PrakashDadhich, Mr. Pushpendra Kumar, Mr. Mukesh K Patel (Industry Partner))from LNMIIT, Jaipur hadparticipated in it and stands among the top 19 shortlisted from the total participation of more than600 teams from across the country. We are then invited to present our design and idea in GrandFinale round entitled “Design & Development of a Plant to produce Torrefied Fuel by using Agroresidue bio mass" at NTPC, Delhi.

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Resources & Equipment (Available With Lead-CEES)

1. Four stroke Single Cylinder Diesel Engine2. Bomb Calorimeter3. Bio Gas Analyzer4. Smoke Meter5. Four stroke Single Cylinder Diesel Engine6. Four stroke Single Cylinder Diesel Engine7. Bomb Calorimeter8. Bio Gas Analyzer9. Smoke Meter

10. Four stroke Single Cylinder DieselEngine

11. Bomb Calorimeter12. Gas Analyzer13. Smoke Meter14. Laminar Flow Sterilizer (Still in

Development Phase)15. Bubble Column Photo Bio Reactor16. Conventional Biodiesel Production Plant

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Few Technologies Developed Under The CMS-ES/CEES/MME

1. In-house fabrication and development of low cost bubble column photo bioreactor formicroalgae harvesting.

2. In-house fabrication and development of low cost laminar flow sterilizer for sterilization ofvarious equipment.

List Of Projects And Activities

1. The Centre has started “Numerical and Simulation Wing” with the help of Dr. Praveen Sharma,Assistant Professor, MME whose research interest are in the area of Multiphase flow, fluidhydrodynamics, fluid-structure interaction and CFD code development in OpenFoam underthe guidance of Dr. Kamal Kishore Khatri, Lead-CEES. This wing specifically work on thesolutions real-time problems using numerical, simulation and various advanced optimizationtechniques with integration of various Machine Learning or AI approaches.

2. Participated in Green Charcoal Hackathon-2020 by Shiv Dadhich and team under thementorship of Dr. K.K. Khatri with the project title “Design & Development of a plant toproduce Torrefied Fuel by using Agro residue Biomass” organised by NTPC and got selected inTop 19 teams all over the country.

3. A Pressure Regulating Tank was installed near the Biogas Plant to ensure the continuoussupply of the Biogas to the Mess and to maintain its self-sustainability. This value addition tothe plant enhances its capacity of storing the gas for further research purposes.

4. The CEES had a mandate of evolving into a Centre of excellence in terms of entrepreneurialleadership innovation, development and new venture creation in the relevant area ofexpertise of the institute and its collaborators. By looking at it, Centre collaborated with GrahBadha Nivaran for a project named Design, Development & Optimization of a multipurposeautomatic machine for Production of utility items based on cow dung (of indigenous cow).The main purpose of this ongoing project is to Design Development of a Machine for makingvarious products using Indigenous cow’s dung; urine as raw material. It also prepares cowdung to be able to use it for making various products of daily use.

5. The centre successfully represents innovative product Automated machine for the productionof fuel and other pellets based on Cow dung and agri-waste materials and Biogas generation &storage in Kamdhenu Deepawali Mahotsav at Paramveer Kalla Ji Maharaj Ki Chhatri,Chittorgarh Fort on Thursday, 12th November 2020 at 04:00 PM - 08:00 PM.

6. In-house fabrication and development of low cost bubble column photo bioreactor formicroalgae harvesting.

7. In-house fabrication and development of low cost laminar flow sterilizer for sterilization ofvarious equipment.

Publications

1. Khatri N., Khatri K.K., Sharma A. Model based evaluation and comparative analysis ofbiological nutrient removal processes, International Conference On Sustainable InfrastructureDevelopment: Innovations and Advances (SIDIA)- 2020, Organized by UPES, Dehradun

2. Khatri N., Khatri K.K., Sharma A. Odour quantification with artificially intelligent nose inwastewater treatment, 6th International Conference on Nanoscience and Nanotechnology(ICONN) 2021, Virtual Conference, organized by SRM Institute of Science and Technology,Chennai.

3. Khatri N., Khatri K.K., Artificial Intelligence for Modelling and Optimization of the BiogasProduction, Book chapter in Artificial Intelligence in Renewable Energy Systems,Wiley-Scrivener, 2021

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4. Narendra Khatri, Kamal Kishore Khatri, Abhishek Sharma, ANN Model for prediction of FaecalContaminants Removal in an Intermittent Cycle Extended Aeration System- Sequential BatchReactor based WWTP, Journal of Water Process Engineering (SCI IF =3.465), Vol 37, 2020,101477, ISSN 2214-7144, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jwpe.2020.101477

11.4. Centre for Cryptography, Cyber Security and Digital Forensics (C3-SDF)

Center Lead : Dr. Jayaprakash KarCo-Lead : Dr. Shweta Bhandari

Objectives❏ The Centre is carrying out industry-relevant research involving Information Security,

Cryptography, Cyber Security and Digital Forensics to address current and potential cybersecurity and digital forensic challenges.

❏ Its strategic objective is to promote wide-ranging multidisciplinary research and to train anddevelop skills in cyber security and digital forensic amongst its students and the widercommunity through seminars, workshops and training.

Key Research Areas: Cryptology, Blockchain Technology, Cryptography using machine learning and AI,Steganography and Steganalysis, Cyber-Physical Systems (CPS), Financial Cryptography, Network Security,Cloud and Big Data Security, VANET security, Mobile Security, IoT Security, Security and Privacy in Socialmedia analytics, Privacy-Enhancing Technologies, Reliability and Dependability, Biometrics security, Dataprotection legislation and security, Formal Methods and Language-based Security, Hardware SecurityDesign, Information Security and Privacy, Post-quantum Cryptography

Technical ActivitiesAn international series of webinars are organized

1. Title - Anonymization and Data masking

Speaker - Prof Bimal Roy

Head of R C Bose Centre for Cryptology and Security, Indian Statistical Institute, former Director of

Indian Statistical Institute, Kolkata.

2. Title - AHA!!! Randomness!!!!

Speaker - Prof. C.Pandu Rangan

Retired Professor, IIT, Madras

3. AICTE-ISTE Sponsored Induction/Refresher Programs on Cyber Security, Digital forensics andBlockchain Technology- 2020-2021

4. AICTE Training and Learning Faculty Development Program on Blockchain.

Ongoing Research● Cryptographic Protocols using Elliptic Curve and Pairing based Cryptography● Provable Security and Random oracle● Blockchain Technology● Securing VANET● Securing Cloud against malicious insiders● Secured Health Management System● Secured Computing● Privacy preserving in ANDROID

Research Collaborators● Prof K.Sagar Naik, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Waterloo,

Canada● Dr. Tamer Abdelkader, Faculty of Computer and Information Sciences, Ain Shams University, Cairo.

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● Prof David Wei, Department of Computer & Information Sciences, Fordham University, New York● Dr. Manoj Singh Gaur, Director, IIT, Jammu● Dr. E.S. Pilli, Department of CSE, MNIT Jaipur

M.Tech Thesis completed1. Surbhi Kataria “Secure and Light Weight Protocol for securing Data Theft in Cloud”2. Jitendra Sharma, “A Security Framework of Group Location Based Mobile Applications in Cloud

Computing Using Dynamic Key”3. Rinky Goyal, “Key generation using seed value in Bitcoin”

Outreach Activities during academic year 2020-211. Dr.Jayaprakash Kar is Associate editor of Journal of Circuits, Systems and Computers, World

Scientific.2. Dr. Shweta Bhandari was invited for expert talk at the DTE approved and AICTE-ISTE sponsored

One Week Online Refresher Program entitled “Mobile and Cloud Security: Challenges andDirections” at Computer Engineering Department, A. V. Parekh Technical Institute, Rajkot during3rd June to 9th June, 2021.

3. Dr. Shweta Bhandari was invited for expert talk at the Department of Computer Applications,Cochin University of Science and Technology, Kochi, Kerala for the AICTE Training and Learning(ATAL) Faculty Development Programme on "Cyber Security Oversight for Information Protection”during 12th July to 16th July, 2021.

4. Dr. Shweta Bhandari has given an expert talk at the Center of Cryptography, Cyber Security andDigital Forensics approved AICTE-ISTE sponsored One Week Online Refresher Program entitled“Cyber Security” at LNM IIT Jaipur during 3rd June to 9th June, 2021.

5. Dr. Shweta Bhandari has given an expert talk at the Center of Cryptography, Cyber Security andDigital Forensics approved AICTE Training And Learning (ATAL) Faculty Development Programmeon "Blockchain Technologies” June 14th to June 18th 2021.

6. Dr. Poonam Gera was invited for expert talk at Poornima Institute of Technology, Jaipur for five DaysAICTE Training And Learning(ATAL) Faculty Development Programme on “Cyber Security ” 6th -10th, October 2020

Publications during academic year 2020-211. Jayaprakash Kar “ELDA: an efficient and low-cost protocol for data authentication for IoT”, Wireless

Networks, Springer, July 2021. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11276-021-02739-32. Jayaprakash Kar, Xiaoguang Liu , Fagen Li “CL-ASS: An efficient and low-cost certificateless

aggregate signature scheme for wireless sensor networks”, Journal of Information Security andApplications, Elsevier, Volume 61, 102905, September 2021.https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jisa.2021.102905

3. Sivleen Kaur, Sheetal Chaturvedi, Aabha Sharma and Jayaprakash Kar, "A Research Survey onApplications of Consensus Protocols in Blockchain,, Security and Communication Networks,Hindawi & Weily, Volume 2021, https://doi.org/10.1155/2021/6693731, Jan 2021.

4. Jayaprakash Kar, Khirasagar Naik and Tamer Mostafa Abdelkader “A Secure and LightweightProtocol for Message Authentication in Wireless Sensor Networks”, IEEE Systems Journal,10.1109/JSYST.2020.3015424

5. Jayaprakash Kar, “Provably secure certificateless deniable authenticated encryption scheme”,Journal of Information Security and Applications, Elsevier, Volume 54, 102581, pp 2214-2126,October 2020.

11.5. LNMIIT Centre for Smart Technologies (L-CST)

Center Lead : Dr. Abhishek Sharma

Objectivesa. This centre focuses on the loT/Cyber-Physical System Space.b. L-CST envisions to make LNMIIT as a zero-waste campus.c. The centre aims to develop a system to identify and eliminate wastage of all kinds of natural

resources.

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d. Efforts are on to develop a mechanism to systematically evolve a research prototype into industryprototype and minimum viable product in time bound and gated approach.

e. Attaining smart-energy monitoring and management solutions for campus is one of its agendaitems of work.

Areas of research: Internet Of things, Prototype Development, Electronics Devices, Development of SmartSystems

Publications during academic year 2020-211. S. N. Mishra, R. Shah, K. Jena, “Normally-Off AlGaN/GaN MOSHEMT as Lebel Free Biosensor” ECS

Journal of Solid State Science and Technology, Vol.9, Issue. 06, pp. 065002, July, 2020. [IF: 2.142(2019), SCIE, JCR]. (IOP)

2. N. Khatri, K. K. Khatri, and A. Sharma, “Artificial neural network modelling of faecal coliformremoval in an intermittent cycle extended aeration system-sequential batch reactor basedwastewater treatment plant,” Journal of Water Process Engineering, vol. 37, p. 101477, Oct. 2020,doi: 10.1016/j.jwpe.2020.101477.

3. A. Sharma, P. Vanjani, N. Paliwal, C. M. W. Basnayaka, D. N. K. Jayakody, H.-C. Wang, and P. MuthuChidambara Nathan, “Communication and networking technologies for UAVs: A survey,” Journal ofNetwork and Computer Applications, vol. 168, p. 102739, Oct. 2020

11.6. LNMIIT Centre for Robotics and Artificial Intelligence (L-CRAI)

Center Lead : Dr. Mohit Makkar

AboutThe LNMIIT created the LNMIIT- Centre for Robotics and Artificial Intelligence (L-CRAI) as part of itsselect focused sustainable innovation-enablement and technology-based opportunity creation initiativeshaving potential to enable early as well as long-term benefits to the campus, society and the nation. TheL-CRAI would be encouraged to become an innovation, research and development hub around which notonly LNMIIT but also many other institutions in the vicinity might get enabled over the years.

Brief History & MotivationMonth & Year Of Establishment: January 2018

Motivation For Establishing The CentreTo bring together like-minded students and faculty members of different departments of LNMIIT forpursuing research in Robotics and Artificial Intelligence which will cater the needs of modern world andhuman kind by automating it in all walks of life. To provide students a platform to show their creativityand give shape to their ideas and imaginations.

VisionCreating robots that see and understand for the sustainable wellbeing of people and the environment theylive in. Becoming one of the best Research Centers around the world in which we can provide solutions toIndustries and Businesses and also serve human kind with our inventions related to robotics.❏ To mark our presence by writing some research projects and getting funding from various

national and international sponsoring agencies.❏ To self-develop 4 specialized R&D centres in LNMIIT campus as Industrial Automation Lab,

Humanoid Robots Lab, Aerial Robots Lab and Artificial Intelligence Lab each one coordinatingwith other.

❏ To partner with the small and medium scale industries near Jaipur as their R&D partner formaking them fully automated.

❏ To partner with Govt. of India on Robotics projects related to agriculture and defense sector.

Goals❏ Becoming a premier laboratory for R&D in the areas of Robotics, Industrial Automation,

Artificial Intelligence.❏ Developing new robotic technologies to expand the capabilities of robots.

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Objectives❏ To provide solutions to industrial automation problems.❏ To work on the projects which can lead to future Robots.❏ To develop Robots for humankind.❏ To research in creating new and innovative technologies.❏ To act in the direction of low-cost Automation.❏ To emphasize the development of Agriculture and defense through Technology.

Initial Research Thrust Areas1. Design and Development of Fully Autonomous GPS based Drone.2. Design and Development of Pipe Cleaning Robot.3. Design and Development of Automated Shopping Cart.4. Design and Development of Industrial Robotic Arm.5. Design and Development of 6 legged Mars Rover.6. Design and Development of Humanoid Robots.7. Design and Development of Automated Drilling Machine for low-cost Automation.8. Design and development of Self-Balancing Robot.9. Design and Development of Automated Security Guard Robot.

Laboratory & Other FacilitiesThe Fully Equipped Physical Research Centre was established on the 2nd Floor of the MME Department.The physical Centre was officially inaugurated by Honorable Director of the LNMIIT, Prof. RahulBanerjee in April 2018.

Research Equipment

Sr. No. Name of Equipment QTY.

1 Software AUTOSIM-200 for 8 education licenses 1

2 CIROS Software 12 Licenses 1

3 Siemens Step 7 Software 12 Licences 1

4 Lab View 2018 Software 10 Licenses 1

5 MATLAB Software Campus License 1

6 Automated Drilling Machine Research Platform 1

7 MyRIO 1900 16

8 sbRIO 9632 5

9 cRIO 9075 1

10 Modular Production System 1

11 Mindstorms EV3 LEGO 3

12 WIN CC Software 2 Licenses 1

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13 Proteus Software 10 Licenses 1

14 Multisim software 10 Licenses 1

15 Ultiboard Software 10 Licenses 1

The details of the student members appointed/involved since year 19-20 in LCRAI

Sr. No. Name of student member Roll No.

1 AMAN JAIN 18UME054

2 MADHVENDRA SINGH SHEKHAWAT 18UME041

3 KARTIK LADHA 18UME047

4 RITIK RAJPUT 18UME042

Student Projects Sponsored By LCRAI1. Nearest Parking Locator2. Self-driving robot with mobile navigation3. Simulation of Path planning Algorithm for a robot on different types of terrains.4. Design of Autonomous vehicle System.5. modeling and simulation of swarm robot's navigation.6. Real Time Driving Aid for road safety7. Online coolant management system8. Automating Aquaponics9. Designing a software for modelling and Simulation of Mechanisms

Research Project Applied1. Project Title: Design, Development & Optimization of a multipurpose automatic machine for

Production of utility items based on cow dung (indigenous cow).● Name of PI: Dr. K.K. Khatri● Name of Co-I: Dr. Mohit Makkar

Other Work In Which Lcrai Played A Major Role Since 20191. Since 2019, LCRAI solely developed 3 executive development programs to be launched soon.

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11.7. Centre for Educational Technology & Teaching Learning Innovation (CET-TLI)

Center Lead : Prof. Raghuvir Singh TomarCo-Lead : Dr. Sandeep SainiMember : Dr. Usha Kanoongo

Objectives❏ Identifying key needs of the Institute in the areas of teaching-learning, pedagogy, effective

evaluation/learning-assessment vehicles, apart from the corresponding enabling technologies andintensive teaching-learning workshops for new (first-time) teachers and retraining of select existingfaculty/laboratory staff as per need.

❏ Creating a prioritized and phase-wise plan of action that is in synchronization with the institutecalendar.

❏ Identifying and/or creating technology-based cost-effective solutions as well as their pilot testing,deployment and delivery; and, where feasible and relevant, enable outreach. Becoming an activityhub around which not only the LNMIIT but also many other institutions in the vicinity (or evenbeyond) could get enabled over the years.

List of activities (collaborative events) organized within the Institute during the academicsession 2020-21

Teacher Training Workshop 2020January -March 2020No. of participants: 15The CET-TLI launched the Teacher Training Workshop on 23 January 2020. This was a two-phased trainingprogramme wherein those faculty members at the Assistant Professor level who had joined the Institutewithin a period of one year and first-time teachers were invited to participate. Altogether 15 facultymembers participated in the workshop.

Workshop Phase IThis was held during February 2020. Each participating faculty member was invited to deliver a 15-minutetalk before an audience comprising the CET-TLI members and workshop participants. For every presentationdelivered, the CET-TLI members provided a detailed analysis on the presenter’s teaching practices andlecture management skills. This was done with the objective of appreciating their existing skills andproviding them appropriate feedback on their areas of improvement, with a positive helping-hand attitude.

Workshop Phase II

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This was held during March 2020 and included the second round of presentations by the participatingmembers. The objective was to observe the level of refinement in their teaching skills since the first phase.Significant improvement was witnessed in most of the participants. Their presentations reflected that theyhad attempted to incorporate the suggestions on effective teaching in their classrooms. Several valuableinsights were drawn from this programme which have been recorded as guidelines for new as well asexperienced teachers.

Moodle Training sessions for the institute faculty were organized in the month of August 2020. Thesesessions were held to train the faculty members to get acquainted with the LMS and for smooth conduct ofthe courses on Moodle platform for the incoming semesters. Three sessions were heldSession 1: 17th August 2020 10 AM - 12:00 noon around 25 participants.Session 2: 17th August 2020 2 PM - 4:00 PM around 25 participants.Session 3: 18th August 2020 10:00 AM to 12:00 noon around 20 participants.

Prior to these sessions, online resources were generated to train the faculty members about the program.The resources were hosted on YouTube and made publicly available at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zYtQYQsJKk0&amp;list=PLVPvCFxS6ake8LV7LNEhZ9eNg9_lPAFuA&amp;index=1. These resources have helped the community outside the institute as well to get trainedon Moodle platform. The videos were uploaded on 31st July 2020, and they are being updated regularly.

Once the faculty members were trained and the courses were created, the training for students was held inSeptember 2020. On 19 th and 20 th September all 2200 students at the institute were divided into 88 slotsand they were exposed to the mock drills to given them the real-time experience of the evaluationmechanism. The exams were set on Moodle with additional security of safe exam browser. The invigilationwas done using Google meet. Every invigilator was assigned 15 students to invigilate at a given time. Thestudents appeared for a 30-minute mock drill. The faculty members and the staff members acted asinvigilators. These sessions had live web and call-based support and all the doubts were handled in thosesessions.

11.8. Centre for Material Science and Nano Electronics (C-MSNE)

Center Lead : Prof. Ganesh Datt SharmaCo-Lead : Prof. Somnath Biswas

Objectives❏ The Centre will focus on the R&D programmes in the emerging research area of material science and

technology to develop new materials, process methodologies and technologies leading to thedevelopment of fast speed electronic and optoelectronic devices to be employed in Informationtechnology and telecommunication through cutting edge research in nanoelectronics, developingdevice for meeting the societal requirement in the country and creating the facilities of materialsdevelopment and characterization and device fabrication.

❏ The thrust area includes Energy storage, energy conversion, supercapacitors, flexible electronics,sensor materials, green materials, nanomaterials and their applications, Nano-photonics, polymersfor photonics, photonics sensors, organic electronics, computational nanoelectronics and displays.

11.9. Centre for Mathematical and Financial Computing (C-MFC)

Center Lead : Dr. Vikas GuptaCo-Lead : Dr. Ajit Patel, Dr. Sagnik Bagchi

ObjectivesThe C-MFC shall primarily work towards identification of key needs that merits its research attention. TheCentre would carry out industry-relevant and other forms of applied as well as basic research involvingvarious forms and sub-areas of mathematical computing, modelling and simulation as well as various areasand sub-areas of financial computing, economic and financial modeling and simulation as well asmultidisciplinary work requiring relevant intervention of mathematics, economics or finance with otherdomains like information science, biology, astronomy, public policy, epidemiology, drug design andbehavioural modeling and simulation etc. The development of techniques and technology of relevance,

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application of resultant research towards solving problems of interest, transfer of developed technology toindustry/government/social service organizations and any required outreach would be in the scope of workof the Centre. The C-MFC would be encouraged to become a multi-disciplinary innovation hub around whichnot only the LNMIIT but also many other Institutions and industries in the vicinity (and even beyond) couldget enabled over the years.

The C-MFC would have the mandate of evolving into a Centre of Excellence in terms of research, innovation,development and new venture creation in the areas mentioned above.

11.10. The LNMIIT Centre for Technology-Business Incubation & EntrepreneurialLeadership (L-CTBI & EL)

Center Lead : Dr. Manoj Kumar

Objectives❏ Providing a platform for faculty, staff, students and alumni for innovation, incubation and

entrepreneurial leadership.❏ Enabling technology-based solutions to problems that might be being faced by the campus, society,

state and the nation.❏ Providing Business Assistance and Mentoring, accelerate emerging companies' development by

providing hands-on assistance during the vulnerable start-up years."

11.11. LNMIIT Unified Computing Services Centre (LUCS)

Center Lead : Dr. Sunil Kumar

Objectives❏ Identifying key computing needs of the institute for effective planning and maintenance of

entire computing infrastructure including but not limited to network infrastructure, internetaccess, cyber security, VoIP telephony support and related integration services.

❏ Providing IT based security and surveillance services, audiovisual conference services,in-campus audio-visual services, digital storage services and high-performance computingservices.

❏ Enabling design, deployment, maintenance and periodic update of LNMIIT website.❏ Guiding ERP/MIS related services and advising the institute on timely, proactive enhancement

of related facilities and services in keeping with the vision of the institute and emerging trends.

11.12. Centre for Executive Development Programmes (CEP)

Center Lead : Prof. Ravi Prakash GorthiCo-Lead : Dr. Vikram Sharma

Objectives❏ Creating need based, industry-relevant and self-sustainable short-term, medium-term and long-term

executive development programmes leading to different levels of certifications and continuingeducation programmes involving Massive Open Online Courses (MOOC), Small Private Online Courses(SPOC), Corporate Open Online Courses (COOC) as well as blended learning, virtual laboratories andsecure online testing based provisions.

❏ The Centre would be encouraged to become a learning hub around which programmes benefitingpeople across the boundaries of states and nations could be developed.

❏ This Centre has a mandate of executing a sustainable skills development outreach programme incoordination with, local, state level and national level entities with a view to help improvingemployability of the people from weaker economic sections of the society and rural/semi-rural areas.

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11.13. The LNMIIT Centre for Wellness and Positive Health (L-CWPH)

Center Lead : Dr. Amit Neogi

Objectives❏ The L-CWPH aims at ensuring positive mental health, general feeling of wellness and help in realizing

the value added by ethics-driven value system in both personal and professional spheres.❏ The focus is on bringing about positive changes in the way young students may perceive certain

aspects and difficulties in life but would not be limited in the scope of its work and reach to studentsalone.

❏ The Centre aims to become a mentoring, counselling, interaction and outreach hub around which,over a period of time not only the LNMIIT but also broadly the community around it, state and nationwould be benefitted over the years.

11.14. Centre for Advanced Software and Skills Development (CASSD)

Center Lead : Mr. Vikas Bajpai

Objectives❏ Identification of key needs that the campus, society, state and the nation may have which in a

prioritized and phase-wise manner could be helped with the creation of software andhardware-software technology-based cost-effective solutions, testing (pilot deployment included),deployment and finally technology transfer, commercialization and where feasible and relevant,outreach.

❏ This Centre would have a mandate of evolving into a center of excellence in terms of designresearch innovation, advanced software skills, development and software solutions developed inthe software and hardware-software areas.

11.15. Centre for Study and Use of Authentic Examination (L-CSUAE)

Center Lead : Prof. Philip L Miller

Objectives❏ The centre shall primarily work in the areas of research, development and industry-ready

technology/ services which would help any industry that needs to develop professional-grade, highquality software and recruit developers or train existing senior developers, project-leads etc.

❏ The centre shall help any such company that wishes to identify different levels of job readiness ofpotential recruits as well as assessing level of competency of software developers/ team leaders andproject managers already on-roll of a company.

11.16. Centre for Communication, Soft-Skills and Personality Development (C-CSPD)

Center Lead : Dr. Usha Kanoongo

Objectives❏ The centre aims to strengthen communication skills, soft skills and overall personality of students

and participating individuals.❏ The centre aims to work towards training the participants with the nuances of effective

communication, workplace etiquette and socio-professional interaction and thus foster theiremployability and professional success.

❏ The aspired activities of this virtual centre are:● Conducting workshops, training sessions on interview skills, employability skills and

personality development for students.● Organizing Faculty and Staff Development Programmes.

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Workshop on Communication SkillsThe centre organized a Communication Skills Workshop for BTech 1st Year students during March to July2021. The events under this programme were held on Saturdays in online mode.Activities were conducted to enhance communication skills of students. ranging from articulating correctmessages and speaking confidently to writing emphatically and listening actively, interpersonal relations,teamwork, leadership and overall personality development. Details of some of the events are as under.

JAM or “Just a minute”JAM or “Just a minute” was conducted 3rd April 2021, online on the google meet platform. It was anindividual task activity, and all the students were allotted randomly from a pool of 100 topics selectedcarefully by the student members.Each individual was given 35 seconds before to structure his ideas and then a minute to speak about the verysame. The topics ranged from travel and cuisines to general knowledge and current affairs like Evergreen andASEAN Summit.A total of 100 participants attended the workshop, and the winners were selected based on speech delivery,vocabulary and knowledge of the topic.

PictionaryPictionary was conducted on the online platform drawize.com. The students were divided into teams of 5 forthis activity.One member from each team had to draw and represent an English idiom which was randomly chosen by thesoftware from a pool of 50 phrases. The other students had to guess the idiom being drawn by the otherteams. The person who identified the maximum number of phrases was the winner.After the game ended, the students were explained the usage of all the 50 idioms, and a PDF was shared withthem for their convenience.A total number of 144 students participated in the event, and the event was conducted in 2 slots. i.e. Morning(11:00 am - 1:00 p.m.) and afternoon (2:00 p.m.- 4:00p.m.).

Questionnaire

A Time bound Questionnaire event was organized for the students in which they were divided into groups of10. A topic was announced and the first person to press the buzzer got a chance to speak on the topic for 1minute. To ensure that every student gets to speak, 10 topics were drafted and announced. The event sawgood participation from everyone. The winners were announced based on the very same scores.

11.17. Centre for Media Relations and Studies (CMRS)

Center Lead : Dr. Shweta PandeyCo-Lead : Mr. Vikas Bajpai

About1. The centre will strives to bring LNMIIT to the forefront through ethical and value-based but thoughtful

and convincing brand /image building and appropriate forms of promotion. The foremost role of theCell is to foster community relations with external stakeholders through several media relationactivities. The CMRS should accomplish this through its regular and deep engagement with all forms ofrelevant media and also by facilitating the Institute's online presence across various platformsincludes Print, Digital and social media. CMRS would ensure that all the important happenings, as wellas the event in or organized by the Institute, are timely shared with the external world. In short, theCentre is expected to be one of the principal visibility connects of the Institute as a window to theoutside world. The main purpose of forming the “Centre of Media Relations and Studies” is to bring upcommunity relations with all the external and internal stakeholders of the institute (including faculty,staff, students, alumni, parents, recruiters and peers) through appropriate information sharing, eventsand media relation activities including but not limited to social media and press-coverage. Positive andjust image/perception creation amongst stakeholders, peers and society outside would be animportant goal of the CMRS.

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12. NOTABLE ACHIEVEMENTS12.1. Notable achievements of students (UG/PG/PhD) in respective departmentsduring 2020-21

Sr. No. Name of Student Department Roll No Details of Achievement

1 Mr. AkshatShrivastavaKulshrestha

MME 18PMM002 Got best paper award for presenting aInternational Conference paper inCIMS-2020 Nit Uttarakhand between 9 to 16October 2020

2 Mr. Shiv PrakashDadhich

MME 19PMM003 "Design & Development of a Plant toproduce Torrefied Fuel by using Agroresidue bio mass” under Green CharcoalHackathon presented at NTPC Delhi, 20thMarch 2021

3 Mr. Ansh Mehta CSE 17UCS027 Presented paper entitled "HybridComputing Scheme for Quasi-basedDeployment in the Internet of Things",in International Conference on Paradigms ofCommunication, Computing and DataSciences (PCCDS 2021) heldduring 7-9 May 2021, Kurukshetra, Haryana,India.

4 Mr. Ritik Bansal CSE 17UCS130 Presented paper entitled "CollaborativeDeployment Strategy for EfficientConnectivity in the Internet of Things",in 2nd International Conference onMathematical Modeling, ComputationalIntelligence Techniques and RenewableEnergy (MMCITRE 2021) heldduring 6-8 February 2021, Gandhinagar,Gujarat, India.

5 Ms. HemakshiManchandia

CSE 18UCS141 Virtual Grace Hopper Celebration (vGHC)student scholarship 2021

6 Mr. Manas Vyas MME 18UME037 Second position in the Elevator Pitchcompetition at the ASME E-Fest Digitalorganized during 23-24 April, 2021

7 Ms. Aabha Sharma CCE 17UCC001 Published a journal paper entitled"Applications of Consensus Protocols inBlockchain: A Research Survey", Journal ofComputer Network and Communication,Hindawi

8 Ms. SheetalChaturvedi

CSE 17UCS148

9 Ms. Sivleen Kaur CCE 17UCC057

10 Mr. Garv Tambi ECE 18UEC118 Selected for Google Summer of Code (GSoC)2021 with acceptance of proposal onRoboComp

11 Mr. Manas Vyas MME 18UME037 First and Third positions in the ElevatorPitch competition at the ASME E-Fest AsiaPacific 2020

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12 Mr. Vineet Jain ECE 17UEC135 Selected in Google Summer of Code (GSoC)2020 and worked on RISC-V architecturedeveloping WRAP-V

13 Mr. Ayush Gupta ECE 16UEC003 Atal Innovation Mission: Selected as aMentor of Change for the Atal InnovationMission, an initiative take by Niti Aayog,Govt. of India

14 Ms. VasundharaShukla

CCE 17UCC065 Selected to represent LNMIIT at the Google'sDevelopers Student Club

15 Mr. Manas Vyas MME 18UME037 Attended Student Leadership TrainingConference (SLTC), organized during 31October - 1 November 2020 at the ASMEStudent Leadership Training Conference2020

16 Mr. Nipun Jain MME 18UME010 Participated in industry India conclave quizheld nationally and got selected among thetop 30 students in India under themechanical division and secured a cashprize of ₹500 each

17 Ms. JahanviBudania

MME 18UME066 Participated in industry India conclave quizheld nationally and got selected among thetop 30 students in India under themechanical division and secured a cashprize of ₹500 each

18 Mr. Somya Jain MME 18UME020 Participated in industry India conclave quizheld nationally and got selected among thetop 30 students in India under themechanical division and secured a cashprize of ₹500 each

19 Mr. Harsh Mehta ECE 17UEC053 Won Second prize in The Tata CrucibleCampus Quiz, organized by TATA Group20 Mr. Sameer

ChaturvediECE 18UEC181

21 Mr. Deepjyoti Kalita CSE 16UCS057 Won first prize in The Tata Crucible CampusQuiz, organized by TATA Group22 Mr. Aditya

ChakrabortyECE 18UEC093

23 Mr. Abhinav Shukla ECE 17UEC008 Secured First and Second places in StrideStars Impact Challenge at Harvard CollegeProject For Asian and InternationalRelations (HPAIR 2020)

24 Mr. Tarun Singh CSE 17UCS169

25 Mr. Punit Agarwal CSE 16UCS144 27th edition of Technology Sabha 2020( Zubi Infotech Private Limited has beenawarded by Software Technology Parks ofIndia (STPI) Export Award 2019)

26 Mr. Harsh Gupta CSE 18UCS188 IEEE WCCI 2020

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(Under the leadership of Dr. Pramod Gaursecured 2nd position along with prizemoney of 100 USD)(Online)

27 Mr. Harsh Mundra MME 17UME023 Industry Academia Connect Program byDassault Systems foundation India 2020(Their project on Design and analysis ofDown-The-Hole (DTH) Drill Bit has beenselected)(online)

28 Mr. Nilay Harjani MME 17UME041

29 Ms. Deepa Tilwani CSE 19MCS002 LINZ hackathon at the Ars ElectronicaFestival 2020 organised virtually andsponsored by IEEE brain(She won 2nd placein the LINZ hackathon with a prize money of300 USD)(Online)

12.2. Publications during 2020-21Department of Computer Science and EngineeringBook Chapter

[1] Bharavi Mishra, Aman Ahmad Ansari, Poonam Gera, “How to Enhance Data Privacy on Android: Aproposal”, In: Shahnawaz Khan, K. Thirunavukkarasu, Ayman AlDmour, Salam Salameh Shreem (eds.)A Step Towards Society 5.0: Research, Innovations, and Development in Cloud-Based ComputingTechnologies, pp. x–y, CRC Press, 2021.

Journal[1] S. Gupta, V. Kant, “An aggregation approach to multi-criteria recommender system using genetic

programming”, Evolving Systems, vol. 11, no. 1, pp. 29–44, 2020.

[2] J. Kar, “Provably secure certificateless deniable authenticated encryption scheme”, Journal ofInformation Security and Applications, vol. 54, pp. 1–10, 2020.

[3] J. Kar, K. Naik, T. Abdelkader, “A Secure and Lightweight Protocol for Message Authentication inWireless Sensor Networks”, IEEE Systems Journal, vol. 15, no. 3, pp. 3808–3819, 2020.

[4] S. Bhandari, F. Herbreteau, V. Laxmi, A. Zemmari, M. S. Gaur, P. S. Roop, “SneakLeak+: Large-scaleklepto apps analysis”, Future Generation Computer Systems, vol. 109, pp. 593–603, 2020.

[5] A. Jain, V. Laxmi, M. Tripathi, M. S. Gaur, R. Bishnoi, “TRACK: An algorithm for fault-tolerant, dynamicand scalable 2D mesh network-on-chip routing reconfiguration”, Integration, vol. 72, pp. 92–110,2020.

[6] N. Chakraborty, A. Mondal, S. Mondal, “Scheduling Interdependent Smart Appliances withMixed-Preemption Policy for Peak Load Minimization”, IETE Journal of Research, vol. 66, no. 6, pp.797–805, 2020.

[7] N. Kumar, S. P. Awate, “Semi-supervised robust mixture models in RKHS for abnormality detection inmedical images”, IEEE Transactions on Image Processing, vol. 29, pp. 4772–4787, 2020.

[8] N. Chakraborty, A. Mondal, S. Mondal, “Efficient load control-based demand side managementschemes towards a smart energy grid system”, Sustainable Cities and Society, vol. 59, pp. 1–15, 2020.

[9] A. Chaturvedi, A. Tiwari, S. Chaturvedi, “SysEvoRecomd: Network Reconstruction by Graph Evolutionand Change Learning”, IEEE Systems Journal, vol. 14, no. 3, pp. 4007–4014, 2020.

[10] J. Kar, “ELDA: an efficient and low-cost protocol for data authentication for IoT”, Wireless Networks,vol. 27, no. 6, pp. 3969–3978, 2021.

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[11] V. K. Sharma, L. P. Verma, M. Kumar, R. K. Naha, A. Mahanti, “A-CAFDSP: An adaptive-congestionaware Fibonacci sequence-based data scheduling policy”, Computer Communications, vol. 158, pp.141–165, 2020.

[12] D. Kanellopoulos, V. K. Sharma, “Survey on power-aware optimization solutions for manets”,Electronics, vol. 9, no. 7, pp.1–64, 2020.

[13] A. Chaturvedi, D. Binkley, “Web service slicing: Intra and inter-operational analysis to test changes”,IEEE Transactions on Services Computing, vol. 14, no. 3, pp. 930–943, 2018.

[14] N. S. Rajput, R. Banerjee, D. Sanghi, G. Santhanam, K. Singhal, “Swarm intelligence inspiredmeta-heuristics for solving multi-constraint QoS path problem in vehicular ad hoc networks”, Ad HocNetworks, vol. 123, pp. 1–18, 2021.

[15] A. A. Ansari, P. Gera, B. Mishra, D. Mishra, “A secure authentication framework for WSN-based safetymonitoring in coal mines”, Sādhanā, vol. 45, no. 1, pp. 1–16, 2020.

[16] A. Gupta, S. B. Muthiah, “Viewpoint constrained and unconstrained Cricket stroke localization fromuntrimmed videos”, Image and Vision Computing, vol. 100, pp. 1–38, 2020.

[17] S. Gupta, V. Kant, “Credibility score based multi-criteria recommender system”, Knowledge-BasedSystems, vol. 196, pp. 1–12, 2020.

[18] R. P. Sharma, S. Dey, “A comparative study of handcrafted local texture descriptors for fingerprintliveness detection under real world scenarios”, Multimedia Tools and Applications, vol. 80, no. 7, pp.9993–10012, 2021.

[19] J. S. Kumar, S. Kumar, M. Choksi, M. A. Zaveri, “Collaborative data acquisition and processing for postdisaster management and surveillance related tasks using UAV-based IoT cloud”, InternationalJournal of Ad Hoc and Ubiquitous Computing, vol. 34, no. 4, pp. 216–232, 2020.

[20] A. Chaturvedi, A. Tiwari, D. Binkley, S. Chaturvedi, “Service evolution analytics: change and evolutionmining of a distributed system”, IEEE Transactions on Engineering Management, vol. 68, no. 1, pp.137–148, 2020.

[21] A. Sharma, E. S. Pilli, A. P. Mazumdar, P. Gera, “Towards trustworthy Internet of Things: A survey onTrust Management applications and schemes”, Computer Communications, vol. 160, pp. 475–493,2020.

[22] M. Gupta, P. Gera, B. Mishra, “CPAAS: an efficient conditional privacy-preservation anonymousauthentication scheme using signcryption in VANET”, International Journal of Vehicle Informationand Communication Systems, vol. 6, no. 1, pp. 88–105, 2021.

[23] S. Kaur, S. Chaturvedi, A. Sharma, J. Kar, “A Research Survey on Applications of Consensus Protocolsin Blockchain”, Security and Communication Networks, vol. 2021, pp. 1–22, 2021.

[24] P. K. Saha, N. Chakraborty, A. Mondal, S. Mondal, “Optimal Sizing and Efficient Routing of ElectricVehicles for a Vehicle-On-Demand System”, IEEE Transactions on Industrial Informatics, (EarlyAccess), 2021.

[25] K. Paul, P. Dalapati, N. Kumar, “Optimal Rescheduling of Generators to Alleviate Congestion inTransmission System: A Novel Modified Whale Optimization Approach”, Arabian Journal for Scienceand Engineering, pp. 1–25, 2021.

[26] K. Paul, N. Kumar, P. Dalapati, “Bat Algorithm for Congestion Alleviation in Power System Network”,Technology and Economics of Smart Grids and Sustainable Energy, vol. 6, no. 1, pp. 1–18, 2021.

[27] N. Chakraborty, A. Mondal, S. Mondal, “Intelligent charge scheduling and eco-routing mechanism forelectric vehicles: A multi-objective heuristic approach”, Sustainable Cities and Society, vol. 69, pp.1–13, 2021.

[28] J. Kar, X. Liu, F. Li, “CL-ASS: An efficient and low-cost certificateless aggregate signature scheme forwireless sensor networks”, Journal of Information Security and Applications, vol. 61, pp. 1–14, 2021.

Conference[1] Y. Vekaria et al., “Differential Tracking Across Topical Webpages of Indian News Media”, in 13th ACM

Web Science Conference, ACM, United Kingdom, 2021.

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[2] N. K. Sivaraman, J. R. Tokala, R. S. C. V. Rupesh, S. B. Muthiah, “Event Detection in Twitter using SocialSynchrony and Average Number of Common Friends”, in 13th ACM Web Science Conference, ACM,United Kingdom, 2021.

[3] N. K. Sivaraman, V. Agarwal, Y. Vekaria, S. B. Muthiah, “A Metadata-Based Event Detection MethodUsing Temporal Herding Factor and Social Synchrony on Twitter Data”, in International Conferenceon Research Challenges in Information Science, Springer, Barcelona, Spain, 2021.

[4] V. Agarwal et al., “Under the Spotlight: Web Tracking in Indian Partisan News Websites”, arXivpreprint arXiv:2102. 03656, AAAI - PKP|PS, 2021.

[5] S. Gupta, V. Kant, “A comparative analysis of genetic programming and genetic algorithm onmulti-criteria recommender systems”, in 5th International Conference on Communication andElectronics Systems (ICCES), IEEE, Tamil Nadu, India, 2020.

[6] S. Gupta, V. Kant, “A Review and Classification of Multi-Criteria Recommender Systems”, in 4thInternational Conference on Intelligent Computing and Control Systems (ICICCS), IEEE, Madurai, 2020.

[7] R. Chakraborty, S. Bhandari, N. Chakraborty, R. Das, “Eve2Sign: Creating Signed Networks of NewsEvents”, in Text2Story@ ECIR, ACM, 2020.

[8] N. K. Sivaraman, M. Gaur, S. Baijal, C. V. Rupesh, S. B. Muthiah, A. Sheth, “Exo-sir: An epidemiologicalmodel to analyze the impact of exogenous infection of covid-19 in india”, arXiv preprint arXiv:2008.06335, arxiv, 2020.

[9] N. K. Sivaraman, S. B. Muthiah, P. Agarwal, L. Todwal, “Social synchrony in online social networks andits application in event detection from twitter data”, in IEEE/WIC/ACM International Joint Conferenceon Web Intelligence and Intelligent Agent Technology (WI-IAT), IEEE, Melbourne, Australia, 2020.

[10] R. Chakraborty, R. Das, N. Chakraborty, “Link Prediction in Signed Networks”, in Proceedings of the31st ACM Conference on Hypertext and social media, ACM, Florida, USA, 2020.

[11] K. Manas, M. Jindal, P. Singh, “Low Complexity Video Compression for Fixed Focus Cameras”, in DataCompression Conference (DCC), IEEE, Utah, USA, 2021.

[12] D. Dharminder, D. Mishra, “Construction of Identity Based Signcryption Using Learning withRounding”, in International Conference on Machine Learning, Image Processing, Network Security andData Sciences, Springer, Silchar, India, 2020.

[13] R. Chakraborty, N. Chakraborty, “Are we friends or enemies? Let’s ask thy neighbour!”, in Proceedingsof the 25th International Conference on Intelligent User Interfaces Companion, ACM, Cagliari, Italy,2020.

[14] N. Chakraborty, E. Kalaimannan, “Optimal Sizing of Hybrid Renewable Energy Sources via EfficientDemand Response in Microgrid”, in Proceedings of the Eleventh ACM International Conference onFuture Energy Systems, ACM, Australia, 2020.

[15] V. Jain, D. R. Sahu, D. S. Tomar, “An Approach to Identify Vulnerable Features of Instant Messenger”, inThird ISEA Conference on Security and Privacy (ISEA-ISAP), IEEE, Guwahati, India, 2020.

[16] A. Gupta, A. Karel, and S. B. Muthiah, "Discovering Cricket Stroke Classes in Trimmed TelecastVideos", in International Conference on Computer Vision and Image Processing, Springer, Ropar,Punjab, 2019.

[17] R. Chakraborty, et al. "Eve2Sign: Creating Signed Networks of News Events" Text2Story@ ECIR. 2020.

Department of Electronics and Communication EngineeringBook Chapter[1] Navneet Upadhyay, and Hamurabi Gamboa Rosales "Recursive noise estimation-based Wiener

filtering for monaural speech enhancement." Applied Speech Processing. Academic Press, pp. 22-30,2021.

[2] V. Bankey, P. K. Upadhyay, D. B. da Costa, “Physical Layer Security in Hybrid Satellite-Terrestrial RelayNetworks”, in Physical Layer Security, Springer, pp 1-28, 2021.

[3] Saurav Karmakar, Dibyanshu Gautam and Purnendu Karmakar, “Modeling and Predictions ofCOVID-19 Spread in India”, in Book Machine Vision and Augmented Intelligence—Theory andApplications, Springer Nature, pp. 1-6, 2021.

Page | 163

[4] Harshvardhan Kumar and Rikmantra Basu, “Impacts of Emitter Layer Thickness on the CutoffFrequency of GeSn/Ge Heterojunction Phototransistors”, in Computers and Devices for Communication,Springer Nature, pp. 222-226, 2021.

Journal[1] R. K. Garg, M. V. D. Nair, S. Singhal, R. S. Tomar, “Compact CPW-Fed Asymmetric UWB Antenna with

Sufficient WLAN-Band Rejection”, Progress in Electromagnetics Research C, vol. 108, pp. 201–210,2021.

[2] S. Ghosh, H. Kumar, B. Mukhopadhyay, G.-E. Chang, “Design and Modeling of High-PerformanceDBR-Based Resonant-Cavity-Enhanced Ge Sn Photodetector for Fiber-Optic TelecommunicationNetworks”, IEEE Sensors Journal, vol. 21, no. 8, pp. 9900–9908, 2021.

[3] T. Shaw, G. Samanta, D. Mitra, B. Mandal, R. Augustine, “Design of Metamaterial Based EfficientWireless Power Transfer System Utilizing Antenna Topology for Wearable Devices”, Sensors, vol. 21,no. 10, pp. 1–20, 2021.

[4] H. Kumar, “High-speed short-wave infrared Si-based GeSn MQW phototransistor: An alternative toexisting photodetectors,” Semicond. Sci. Technol., vol. 36, no. 6, pp. 065023(1–8), 2021.

[5] R. Trivedi, B. Verma, P. K. Padhy, “Indirect optimal tuning rules for fractional order proportionalintegral derivative controller”, International Journal of Numerical Modelling: Electronic Networks,Devices and Fields, vol. 34, no. 2, e2838, pp.1–11, 2021.

[6] V. K. Tiwari, A. C. Umarikar, T. Jain, “Measurement of Instantaneous Power Quality Parameters UsingUWPT and Hilbert Transform and Its FPGA Implementation”, IEEE Transactions on Instrumentationand Measurement, vol. 70, pp. 1–13, 2020.

[7] A. Natani, A. Sharma, T. Perumal, “Sequential neural networks for multi-resident activity recognitionin ambient sensing smart homes”, Applied Intelligence, pp. 1–15, 2021.

[8] R. Makkar, A. Gupta, D. Rawal, N. Sharma, “Spectrally efficient M-ary QAM based multi-antennacooperative system over TWDP fading channel”, Transactions on Emerging TelecommunicationsTechnologies, vol. 32, no. 10, pp. 1–16, 2021.

[9] H. Kumar, R. Basu, “Study of the effect of temperature on the detectivity and sensitivity ofGeSn-based heterojunction phototransistor for mid-wave infrared applications”, Applied Physics B,vol. 127, no. 2, pp. 1–5, 2021.

[10] S. Saboo, J. Singha, “Vision based two-level hand tracking system for dynamic hand gestures inindoor environment”, Multimedia Tools and Applications, vol. 80, no. 13, pp. 20579–20598, 2021.

[11] R. K. Garg, M. V. D. Nair, S. Singhal, R. Tomar, “A miniaturized ultra-wideband antenna using ‘modified’rectangular patch with rejection in WiMAX and WLAN bands”, Microwave and Optical TechnologyLetters, vol. 63, no. 4, pp. 1271–1277, 2021.

[12] Q. Wang, H.-N. Dai, X. Li, M. K. Shukla, M. Imran, “Artificial noise aided scheme to secure UAV-assistedInternet of Things with wireless power transfer”, Computer Communications, vol. 164, pp. 1–12,2020.

[13] A. Sharma et al., “Communication and networking technologies for UAVs: A survey”, Journal ofNetwork and Computer Applications, vol. 168, pp. 1–24, 2020.

[14] H. Kumar, R. Basu, “Effect of defects on the performance of Si-based GeSn/Ge mid-infraredphototransistors”, IEEE Sensors Journal, vol. 21, no. 5, pp. 5975–5982, 2020.

[15] T. Shaw, G. Samanta, D. Mitra, “Efficient wireless power transfer system for implantable medicaldevices using circular polarized antennas”, IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation, vol. 69,no. 7, pp. 4109–4122, 2020.

[16] N. Raj, “Low Voltage FVF Current Mirror with High Bandwidth and Low Input Impedance”, IranianJournal of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, vol. 17, no. 3, pp. 1972–1972, 2021.

[17] S. Ghosh et al., “Metal-semiconductor-metal GeSn photodetectors on silicon for short-wave infraredapplications,” Micromachines, vol. 11, no. 9, pp. 795(1–12), 2020.

[18] P. Garg, P. K. Sharma, A. Gupta, “Secure information broadcasting analysis in an indoor VLC systemwith imperfect CSI”, IET Communications, vol. 15, pp. 526–536, 2020.

[19] P. Karmakar, R. V. Rajakumar, R. Roy, “A Survey on Energy Efficient Cellular Mobile Communication”,Wireless Personal Communications, vol.120, pp. 1475–1500, 2021.

Page | 164

[20] A. N. Khan, K. Jena, G. Chatterjee, S. Routray, “An Approach Towards Low Cost III-Nitride GaN/InGaNSolar Cell: The Use of Si/SiCN Substrate”, Silicon, pp. 1–8, 2021.

[21] Q. Wang, H.-N. Dai, Q. Wang, M. K. Shukla, W. Zhang, C. G. Soares, “On connectivity of uav-assisted dataacquisition for underwater internet of things”, IEEE Internet of Things Journal, vol 7, no 6, pp.5371–5385, 2020.

[22] M. Jani, P. Garg, A. Gupta, “On the performance of a cooperative PLC-VLC indoor broadcasting systemconsisting of mobile user nodes for IoT networks”, IEEE Transactions on Broadcasting, vol. 67, no. 1,pp. 289–298, 2020.

[23] M. Jain, S. Soni, N. Sharma, D. Rawal, “Performance analysis at far and near user in NOMA basedsystem in presence of SIC error”, AEU-International Journal of Electronics and Communications, vol.114, pp. 1–9, 2020.

[24] M. Jain, N. Sharma, A. Gupta, D. Rawal, P. Garg, “Performance analysis of NOMA assisted mobile adhoc networks for sustainable future radio access”, IEEE Transactions on Sustainable Computing, vol.6, no. 2, pp. 347–357, 2020.

[25] M. Jain, N. Sharma, A. Gupta, D. Rawal, P. Garg, “Performance analysis of NOMA assisted underwatervisible light communication system”, IEEE Wireless Communications Letters, vol. 9, no. 8, pp.1291–1294, 2020.

[26] A. Kumar, P. Garg, A. Gupta, “PLS analysis in an indoor heterogeneous VLC/RF network based onknown and unknown CSI”, IEEE Systems Journal, vol. 15, no. 1, pp. 68–76, 2020.

[27] M. K. Shukla, H. H. Nguyen, O. J. Pandey, “Secrecy performance analysis of two-way relaynon-orthogonal multiple access systems”, IEEE Access, vol. 8, pp. 39502–39512, 2020.

[28] O. J. Pandey, V. Gautam, S. Jha, M. K. Shukla, R. M. Hegde, “Time Synchronized Node Localization UsingOptimal H-Node Allocation in a Small World WSN”, IEEE Communications Letters, vol. 24, no. 11, pp.2579–2583, 2020.

[29] Y. Liu, H.-N. Dai, Q. Wang, M. K. Shukla, M. Imran, “Unmanned aerial vehicle for internet of everything:Opportunities and challenges”, Computer communications, vol. 155, pp. 66–83, 2020.

[30] A. Agarwal, D. Mishra, “Wireless powered protocol exploiting energy harvesting during cognitivecommunications”, IEEE Wireless Communications Letters, vol. 9, no. 6, pp. 813–816, 2020.

[31] D. Jhawar, P. Sharma, A. Sharma, K. Srinivasan, B.-Y. Chen, “An Efficient Computational Model forAssessing the Stability Characteristics of Electro-active Natural Bio-resources”, Recent Advances inComputer Science and Communications (Formerly: Recent Patents on Computer Science), vol. 13, no. 4,pp. 771–780, 2020.

[32] N. Upadhyay, H. G. Rosales, “Bark scaled oversampled WPT based speech recognition enhancementin noisy environments”, International Journal of Speech Technology, vol. 23, no. 1, pp. 1–12, 2020.

[33] N. Khatri, K. K. Khatri, A. Sharma, “Enhanced energy saving in wastewater treatment plant usingdissolved oxygen control and hydrocyclone”, Environmental technology & innovation, vol. 18, pp.1-39, 2020.

[34] M. K. Shukla, H. H. Nguyen, “Ergodic secrecy sum rate analysis of a two-way relay NOMA system”,IEEE Systems Journal, vol. 15, no. 2, pp. 2222–2225, 2020.

[35] K. S. Yadav, J. Singha, “Facial expression recognition using modified Viola-John’s algorithm and KNNclassifier”, Multimedia Tools and Applications, vol. 79, no. 19, pp. 13089–13107, 2020.

[36] O. J. Pandey, V. Gautam, H. H. Nguyen, M. K. Shukla, R. M. Hegde, “Fault-Resilient DistributedDetection and Estimation Over a SW-WSN Using LCMV Beamforming”, IEEE Transactions on Networkand Service Management, vol. 17, no. 3, pp. 1758–1773, 2020.

[37] J. Jose, A. Agarwal, A. Singh Sengar, R. Gangopadhyay, S. Debnath, “Multichannel allocation forfull-duplex underlay device-to-device communication”, Transactions on EmergingTelecommunications Technologies, vol. 31, no. 4, pp. 1–16, 2020.

[38] M. K. Shukla, H. H. Nguyen, O. J. Pandey, “Multiuser Full-Duplex IoT Networks with Wireless-PoweredRelaying: Performance Analysis and Energy Efficiency Optimization”, IEEE Transactions on GreenCommunications and Networking, vol. 4, no. 4, pp. 982–997, 2020.

[39] S. N. Mishra, R. Saha, K. Jena, “Normally-Off AlGaN/GaN MOSHEMT as Label Free Biosensor”, ECSJournal of Solid-State Science and Technology, vol. 9, no. 6, pp. 1–15, 2020.

Page | 165

[40] S. Choudhury, A. Mohan, P. K. Mishra, D. Guha, “Reconfigurable Dual-Fed Horn with PatternSwitchability Realized by SIW Technology”, IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation, vol. 68,no. 5, pp. 4072–4076, 2019.

[41] C. Kumar, K. Rajawat, “Network Dissensus via Distributed ADMM”, IEEE Transactions on SignalProcessing, vol. 68, pp. 2287–2301, 2020.

[42] M. Jani, P. Garg, A. Gupta, “Performance analysis of a mixed cooperative PLC--VLC system for indoorcommunication systems”, IEEE Systems Journal, vol. 14, no. 1, pp. 469–476, 2019.

[43] B. Verma, P. K. Padhy, “Robust fine tuning of optimal PID controller with guaranteed robustness”,IEEE Transactions on Industrial Electronics, vol. 67, no. 6, pp. 4911–4920, 2019.

[44] V. Basnayake, D. N. K. Jayakody, V. Sharma, N. Sharma, P. Muthu Chidambara Nathan, H. Mabed, “A newgreen perspective of non-orthogonal multiple access (NOMA) for 5g”, Information, vol. 11, no. 2, pp.1-31, 2020.

[45] R. K. Garg, M. V. D. Nair, S. Singhal, R. Tomar, “A new type of compact ultra-wideband planar fractalantenna with WLAN band rejection”, Microwave and Optical Technology Letters, vol. 62, no. 7, pp.2537–2545, 2020.

[46] M. Jain, A. Agarwal, D. Rawal, R. Gangopadhyay, “Adaptive bit and power allocation for dual modeindex modulation based OFDM system”, Physical Communication, vol. 40, pp. 1–9, 2020.

Conference[1] Santhosh Krishnarao Hwang - Cheng Wang, Abhishek Sharma, Mazher Iqbal, “Enhancement of

Advanced Driver Assistance System (Adas) Using Machine Learning”, Advances in Intelligent Systemsand Computing, Springer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH, 2021.

[2] Y.M.M.V. Chowdary, J. R. Tokala, A. Sharma, S. Sharma, V. Sharma, “Artificial Intelligence-basedApproach for Gait Pattern Identification Using Surface Electromyography (SEMG)”, in IEEEInternational Conference on Advanced Networks and Telecommunications Systems (ANTS), New Delhi,India, 2020.

[3] A. Agarwal, D. Mishra, “Altitude Optimization for DF Relaying Trajectory of UAV in CooperativeFANET”, in IEEE Global Communications Conference, Taipei, Taiwan, 2020.

[4] K. Yadav, A. Lamba, D. Gupta, A. Gupta, P. Karmakar, S. Saini, “Bilingual Sentiment Analysis for aCode-mixed Punjabi English Social Media Text”, in 2020 5th International Conference on Computing,Communication and Security (ICCCS), Patna, India, 2020.

[5] A. S. Sengar, R. Gangopadhyay, S. Debnath, “Interference Modelling for an Underlay D2D Network forEfficient Resource Allocation”, in IEEE 3rd 5G World Forum (5GWF), 2020.

[6] V. Dhanwani, N. Kumar, A. K. Bachkaniwala, D. Rawal, S. Kumar, “Assessment of Candidate TechnologyETSI: DECT-2020 New Radio”, in IEEE 3rd 5G World Forum (5GWF), 2020.

[7] M. Jain, N. Sharma, A. Gupta, D. Rawal, P. Garg, “Performance Analysis of DF Relaying AssistedUnderwater Visible Light Communication System”, in International Conference on Signal Processingand Communications (SPCOM), Bangalore, India, 2020.

[8] A. Agarwal, D. Mishra, “Hovering localization and power allocation for UAV assisted DF relaying adhoc network”, in IEEE International Conference on Communications Workshops (ICC Workshops),Dublin, Ireland, 2020.

[9] A. Pandey, M. V. D. Nair, “Inset Fed Miniaturized Antenna with Defected Ground Plane for LoRaApplications”, Procedia Computer Science, vol 171, 2020.

[10] Y. Agrawal, Y. Shah, A. Sharma, “Implementation of machine learning technique for identification ofyoga poses”, in IEEE 9th International Conference on Communication Systems and NetworkTechnologies (CSNT), Gwalior, India, 2020.

[11] R. Makkar, V. Kotha, D. Rawal, V. K. Chakka, N. Sharma, “Low Complexity Based QR-LRL OSIC Detectorfor Downlink NOMA-MIMO Systems”, in IEEE International Conference on Advanced Networks andTelecommunications Systems (ANTS), New Delhi, India, 2020.

[12] A. K. Bachkaniwala, V. Dhanwani, S. S. Charan, D. Rawal, S. K. Devar, “IMT-2020 Evaluation of EUHTRadio Interface Technology”, in IEEE 3rd 5G World Forum (5GWF), 2020.

Page | 166

[13] R. Makkar, V. Kotha, M. S. Kumari, D. Rawal, V. K. Chakka, N. Kumar, “Performance of Downlink SISO NRSystem using MMSE-IRC Receiver”, in IEEE 3rd 5G World Forum (5GWF), 2020.

[14] A. Jhawar, V. Munjal, S. Ranjan, P. Karmakar, “Social Network based Sentiment and Network Analysis toPredict Elections”, in IEEE International Conference on Electronics, Computing and CommunicationTechnologies (CONECCT), Bangalore, India, 2020.

[15] S. Chhabra, V. Dhanwani, V. K. Dhaka, K. Lata, “Design and Analysis of Secure One-way Functions forthe Protection of Symmetric Key Cryptosystems”, in 24th International Symposium on VLSI Design andTest (VDAT), Bhubaneshwar, India, 2020.

[16] M. Jaiswal, V. Sharmay, A. Sharmaz, R. Tomar, “Transfer Learning with L2 Norm Regularization forclassifying static Two Hand Hindi Sign Language Gestures”, in IEEE 9th International Conference onCommunication Systems and Network Technologies (CSNT), Gwalior, India, 2020.

[17] N. Kaushik, K. Lata, “An Approach Towards Resisting Side-Channel Attacks for Secured Testing ofAdvanced Encryption Algorithm (AES) Cryptochip”, Third ISEA Conference on Security and Privacy(ISEA-ISAP), Guwahati, India, 2020.

[18] S. Bhatia D. Nair, “Single Feed Corner Trimmed Circularly Polarized Diagonal Patch Antenna”, inOptical and Wireless Technologies, Springer, Jaipur, India, 2020.

[19] R. Makkar, S. Soni, A. K. Bachkaniwala, D. Rawal, N. Sharma, “Pilot Interpolation Based ChannelEstimation for LTE Systems”, Procedia Computer Science, vol 171, 2020.

[20] V. Jain, A. Sharma, E. A. Bezerra, “Implementation and Extension of Bit Manipulation Instruction onRISC-V Architecture using FPGA”, in 9th International Conference on Communication Systems andNetwork Technologies (CSNT), Gwalior, India, 2020.

Department Of Mechanical And Mechatronics EngineeringBook Chapter

[1] N. Khatri, K.K. Khatri, “Artificial Intelligence for Modelling and Optimization of the Biogas Production”,in Artificial Intelligence in Renewable Energy Systems, Wiley-Scrivener, pp. (), 2021.

[2] S. D. Barewar, S. S. Chougule, “Thermal performance of double-pipe concentric heat exchanger withsynthesized zinc oxide nanofluid”, in Advances in Energy Research, vol. 1, Springer, 2020.

[3] S. H. Khan, S. K. Agnihotri, A. A. Khan, A. Husain, “Finite Element Modeling and Simulation ofProjectile Impact on Ductile Target”, in Recent Advances in Mechanical Engineering, Springer, LectureNotes in Mechanical Engineering. Springer, Singapore, pp. 429–437, 2020.

[4] A. S. Kulshrestha, A. K. Dargar, D. R. Unune, “Selection of Process Parameters and Their MachineLevels for Electro-discharge Face Grinding of D2 Steel”, Lecture notes in Mechanical Engineering,Advances in Engineering Design, Springer, pp. 563–569, 2020.

Journal[1] S. K. Agnihotri, “Evaluation of dynamic SIF during crack propagation in layered plates having

property variation along the crack front”, Sādhanā, vol. 45, pp. 1–10, 2020.

[2] A. Choudhary, M. Kumar, M. K. Gupta, D. K. Unune, M. Mia, “Mathematical modeling and intelligentoptimization of submerged arc welding process parameters using hybrid PSO-GA evolutionaryalgorithms”, Neural Computing and Applications, vol. 32, no. 10, pp. 5761–5774, 2020.

[3] N. Khatri, K. K. Khatri, “Hydrogen enrichment on diesel engine with biogas in dual fuel mode”,International Journal of Hydrogen Energy, vol. 45, no. 11, pp. 7128–7140, 2020.

[4] V. Sharma, N. Virmani, “Development of lean production system using value stream mappingapproach: a case study”, International Journal of Productivity and Quality Management, vol. 30, no. 2,pp. 168–185, 2020.

[5] V. Sharma, B. D. Gidwani, V. Sharma, M. L. Meena, “Modeling the Interactions Among Critical Criteriaof a Cellular Manufacturing System”, IEEE Engineering Management Review, vol. 49, no. 1, pp.148–164, 2020.

[6] S. K. Pathak, K. Karwasra, V. Sharma, V. Sharma, “Analysis of Barriers to Green Manufacturing UsingHybrid Approach: An Investigatory Case Study on Indian Automotive Industry”, Process Integrationand Optimization for Sustainability, pp. 1–16, 2021.

Page | 167

[7] P. O. Sharma, S. D. Barewar, S. S. Chougule, “Experimental investigation of heat transfer enhancementin pool boiling using novel Ag/ZnO hybrid nanofluids”, Journal of Thermal Analysis and Calorimetry,vol. 143, no. 2, pp. 1051–1061, 2021.

[8] N. Khatri, K. K. Khatri, A. Sharma, “Artificial neural network modelling of faecal coliform removal inan intermittent cycle extended aeration system-sequential batch reactor-based wastewatertreatment plant”, Journal of Water Process Engineering, vol 37, pp. 101477 (1–8) 2020.

[9] P. K. Sharma, H. N. Dixit, “Regimes of wettability-dependent and wettability-independent bouncing ofa drop on a solid surface”, Journal of Fluid Mechanics, vol. 908, pp. 2021.

[10] P. K. Sharma, H. N. Dixit, “Energetics of a bouncing drop: Coefficient of restitution, bubbleentrapment, and escape”, Physics of Fluids, vol. 32, no. 11, pp. 2020.

[11] V. Sharma, N. K. Raghuwanshi, A. K. Jain, “Sensitive Sub-band Selection Criteria for Empirical WaveletTransform to Detect Bearing Fault Based on Vibration Signals”, Journal of Vibration Engineering &Technologies, pp. 1–15, 2021.

[12] V. Sharma, “A Review on Vibration-Based Fault Diagnosis Techniques for Wind Turbine GearboxesOperating Under Nonstationary Conditions”, Journal of The Institution of Engineers (India): Series C,pp. 1–17, 2021.

[13] V. Sharma, “Gear fault detection based on instantaneous frequency estimation using variational modedecomposition and permutation entropy under real speed scenarios”, Wind Energy, vol. 24, no. 3, pp.246–259, 2021.

[14] V. Sharma, A. Parey, “Extraction of weak fault transients using variational mode decomposition forfault diagnosis of gearbox under varying speed”, Engineering Failure Analysis, vol. 107, pp. 2020.

[15] V. Lalwani, P. Sharma, C. I. Pruncu, D. R. Unune, “Response surface methodology and artificial neuralnetwork-based models for predicting performance of wire electrical discharge machining of inconel718 alloy”, Journal of Manufacturing and Materials Processing, vol. 4, no. 2, pp. 2020.

[16] A. A. Mulla, D. R. Unune, “Investigating Performance of Quarter-Car Semi-Active Suspension withSkyhook, Fuzzy Logic, Adaptive Neuro-Fuzzy Inference System Control Strategies for ISO-ClassifiedRoad Disturbance”, SAE Technical Paper, vol., pp., 2020.

[17] S. Jain, S. Saboo, C. I. Pruncu, D. R. Unune, “Performance investigation of integrated model of quartercar semi-active seat suspension with human model”, Applied Sciences, vol. 10, no. 9, pp. 2020.

[18] D. R. Unune, H. S. Mali, “Dimensional accuracy and surface quality of micro-channels withlow-frequency vibration assistance in micro-electro-discharge milling”, Advances in Materials andProcessing Technologies, pp. 1–12, 2020.

[19] S. D. Barewar, S. Tawri, S. S. Chougule, “Experimental investigation of thermal conductivity and itsANN modeling for glycol-based Ag/ZnO hybrid nanofluids with low concentration”, Journal ofThermal Analysis and Calorimetry, vol. 139, no. 3, pp. 1779–1790, 2020.

[20] S. D. Barewar, S. S. Chougule, “Heat transfer characteristics and boiling heat transfer performance ofnovel Ag/ZnO hybrid nanofluid using free surface jet impingement”, Experimental Heat Transfer, vol.34, no. 6, pp. 531–546, 2021.

[21] Gaurav Kumar, V. Sharma, “Analyzing determinants for diffusion and adoption of solar power systemsin India”, Materials today Proceedings, vol. 46, pp. 10443–10448, 2021.

[22] C. Nayak, A. Singh, H. Choudhary, D.R. Unune, “Evaluating the Effect of an Amputee’s PhysicalParameters of Pressure on a Lower-Limb Prosthetic Socket Using a Fuzzy-Logic-Based Model”,International Journal of Experimental and Computational Biomechanics, vol., pp., 2020.

Conference[1] N. Khatri, K.K. Khatri, A. Sharma, “Odour quantification with artificially intelligent nose in wastewater

treatment”, in 6th International Conference on Nanoscience and Nanotechnology (ICONN) 2021,SRMIST, Chennai, 2021.

[2] S. Singh, A. B. Singh, M. Kumar, M. L. Meena, G. S. Dangayach, “Dissimilar Metal Welds used in AUSCPower Plant, Fabrication and Structural Integrity Issues”, in IOP Conference Series: Materials Scienceand Engineering, IOP Science, Jaipur, India, 2021.

Page | 168

[3] N. Khatri, K.K.Khatri, A.Sharma, “Model based evaluation and comparative analysis of biologicalnutrient removal processes”, in International Conference On Sustainable Infrastructure Development:Innovations and Advances (SIDIA)- 2020, Springer, Dehradun, India, 2020.

[4] N. Khatri, K. K.Khatri, A.Sharma, “Artificial Neural Network Modelling of Faecal Coliform Removal in anIntermittent Cycle Extended Aeration System-Sequential Batch Reactor based Wastewater TreatmentPlant”, in Proceedings of 5th International Conference on Recent Advancements in Chemical, Energy andEnvironmental Engineering, Elsevier, Chennai, India, 2020.

[5] V. Sharma, A. Parey, “Effect of Lubricant on the Stiffness and Damping Characteristics in a Single-StageGearbox: A Theoretical”, Reliability and Risk Assessment in Engineering: Proceedings of INCRS 2018,Springer, Jabalpur, India, 2020.

Department Of PhysicsBook Chapter[1] A. Agrawal., S.A. Siddiqui, A. Soni, G.D. Sharma, “Device modeling and characteristics of solution

processed perovskite solar cell at ambient conditions”, In: Kalam A., Niazi K., Soni A., Siddiqui S.,Mundra A. (eds) Intelligent Computing Techniques for Smart Energy Systems Lecture Notes in ElectricalEngineering, Springer, pp. 981–988, 2020.

[2] A. Agrawal., S.A. Siddiqui, A. Soni, G.D. Sharma, “Recent development in perovskite solar cell based onplanar structures”, In: Kalam A., Niazi K., Soni A., Siddiqui S., Mundra A. (eds) Intelligent ComputingTechniques for Smart Energy Systems Lecture Notes in Electrical Engineering, Springer, pp. 1039–1046,2020.

Journal[1] M. L. Keshtov et al., “New Conjugated Polymers Based on Dithieno [2, 3-e: 3′, 2′-g] Isoindole-7, 9

(8H)-Dione Derivatives for Applications in Nonfullerene Polymer Solar Cells”, Solar RRL, vol. 4, no. 3,pp. 1900475, 2020.

[2] M. Nos et al., “A bis (diketopyrrolopyrrole) dimer-containing ligand in platinum (ii) polyyneoligomers exhibiting ultrafast photoinduced electron transfer with PCBM and solar cell properties”,Journal of Materials Chemistry C, vol. 8, no. 7, pp. 2363–2380, 2020.

[3] M. L. Keshtov et al., “Synthesis and Photovoltaic Investigation of 8, 10-Bis (2-octyldodecyl)-8,10-dihydro-9 H-bisthieno [2′, 3′: 7, 8; 3 ″, 2 ″: 5, 6] naphtho [2, 3-d] imidazol-9-one Based ConjugatedPolymers Using a Nonfullerene Acceptor”, ACS Applied Energy Materials, vol. 3, no. 1, pp. 495–505,2019.

[4] M. L. Keshtov et al., “Synthesis and photovoltaic properties of new conjugated DA polymers based onthe same fluoro-benzothiadiazole acceptor unit and different donor units”, Chemistry Select, vol. 5,no. 2, pp. 853–863, 2020.

[5] F. G. Guijarro, R. Caballero, P. de la Cruz, R. Singhal, F. Langa, G. D. Sharma, “TernaryAll-Small-Molecule Solar Cells with Two Small-Molecule Donors and Y6 Non Fullerene Acceptor witha Power Conversion Efficiency over Above 14% Processed from a Non Halogenated Solvent”, SolarRRL, vol. 4, no. 11, pp. 2000460, 2020.

[6] S. Pokhriyal, S. Biswas, “Effects of structural parameters on the optical and magnetic properties ofsurface stabilized intrinsic CdSe nanoparticles”, Applied Surface Science, vol. 501, pp. 144040 (1–23),2020.

[7] Y. Chen et al., “A--DA′ D--A Nonfullerene Acceptor Obtained by Fine-Tuning Side Chains on PyrrolesEnables PBDB-T-Based Organic Solar Cells with over 14% Efficiency”, ACS Applied Energy Materials,vol. 3, no. 12, pp. 11981–11991, 2020.

[8] C. Rodríguez-Seco et al., “Panchromatic Triple Organic Semiconductor Heterojunctions for EfficientSolar Cells”, ACS Applied Energy Materials, vol. 3, no. 12, pp. 12506–12516, 2020.

[9] M. L. Keshtov et al., “Synthesis and Optical and Electrochemical Properties of Novel RandomTerpolymers Based on Diketopyrrolopyrrole and Benzodithiazole/Quinoxaline Units for PolymerSolar Cells”, in Doklady Chemistry, vol. 490, pp. 6–10, 2020.

[10] A. Singh, “Dark energy gravitational wave observations and ice age periodicity”, Physics Letters B, vol.802, pp. 135226 (1–6), 2020.

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[11] G. D. Sharma, L. Bucher, N. Desbois, C. P. Gros, G. Gupta, P. Malhotra, “Polymer solar cell based onternary active layer consists of medium bandgap polymer and two non-fullerene acceptors”, SolarEnergy, vol. 207, pp. 1427–1433, 2020.

[12] M. L. Keshtov et al., “New Donor-Acceptor polymers with a wide absorption range for photovoltaicapplications”, Solar Energy, vol. 205, pp. 211–220, 2020.

[13] C.-L. Huang, G. Kumar, G. D. Sharma, F.-C. Chen, “Plasmonic effects of copper nanoparticles in polymerphotovoltaic devices for outdoor and indoor applications”, Applied Physics Letters, vol. 116, no. 25,pp. 253302, 2020.

[14] J. Yang et al., “Carbazole-based green and blue-BODIPY dyads and triads as donors for bulkheterojunction organic solar cells”, Dalton Transactions, vol. 49, no. 17, pp. 5606–5617, 2020.

[15] M. L. Keshtov, S. A. Kuklin, I. O. Konstantinov, A. R. Khokhlov, C. Dou, G. D. Sharma, “Synthesis andCharacterization of Wide-Bandgap Conjugated Polymers Consisting of Same Electron Donor andDifferent Electron-Deficient Units and Their Application for Nonfullerene Polymer Solar Cells”,Macromolecular Chemistry and Physics, vol. 221, no. 10, pp. 2000030, 2020.

[16] B. Rajkumar, L. Khanam, E. N. Koukaras, G. D. Sharma, S. P. Singh, B. Lochab, “Cardanol-andGuaiacol-Sourced Solution-Processable Green Small Molecule-Based Organic Solar Cells”, ACSSustainable Chemistry & Engineering, vol. 8, no. 15, pp. 5891–5902, 2020.

[17] F. G. Guijarro et al., “The influence of the terminal acceptor and oligomer length on the photovoltaicproperties of A--D--A small molecule donors”, Journal of Materials Chemistry C, vol. 8, no. 14, pp.4763–4770, 2020.

[18] M. Privado et al., “Ternary Organic Solar Cell with a Near-Infrared AbsorbingSelenophene--Diketopyrrolopyrrole-Based Nonfullerene Acceptor and an Efficiency above 10%”,Solar RRL, vol. 4, no. 4, pp. 1900471, 2020.

[19] R. Mishra et al., “Accepting to Donate: NDI-Based Small Molecule as a Donor for Bulk HeterojunctionBinary Solar Cells”, European Journal of Organic Chemistry, vol. 2020, no. 11, pp. 1603–1610, 2020.

[20] M. Privado, P. de la Cruz, G. Gupta, R. Singhal, G. D. Sharma, F. Langa, “Highly efficient ternary polymersolar cell with two non-fullerene acceptors”, Solar Energy, vol. 199, pp. 530–537, 2020.

[21] A. Aggarwal, S. Naskar, A. K. Sahoo, S. Mogurampelly, A. Garai, P. K. Maiti, “What do we know aboutDNA mechanics so far?”, Current opinion in structural biology, vol. 64, pp. 42–50, 2020.

[22] S. Pokhriyal, S. Biswas, “Photoresponse of CdSe-PVA nanocomposite films at low magnetic fields”,Nanotechnology, vol. 31, no. 49, pp. 495205, 2020.

[23] S. Pokhriyal, S. Biswas, “Inducing ferromagnetism in surface stabilised intrinsic CdSe nanoparticlesby a simple process”, Materials Science and Technology, vol. 36, no. 13, pp. 1503–1506, 2020.

[24] S. Gupta et al., “Efficacy of ion irradiation in strengthening the surface plasmon resonance effect ofAu nanoparticles”, Surfaces and Interfaces, vol. 21, pp. 100633(1–23), 2020.

[25] Y. Chen et al., “Indole-based A--DA′ D--A type acceptor-based organic solar cells achieve efficiencyover 15% with low energy loss”, Sustainable Energy & Fuels, vol. 4, no. 12, pp. 6203–6211, 2020.

[26] R. Vishnoi et al., “Tuning of structural and optical properties of Au nanoparticles inamorphous-carbon”, Physica Scripta, vol. 95, no. 10, pp. 105002, 2020.

[27] M. L. Keshtov et al., “New High-Bandgap 8, 10-Dihydro-9H-Bistieno [2′, 3′: 7.8; 3 ″, 2 ″: 5.6] Naphtho[2, 3-d] Imidazole-9-One-Based Donor--Acceptor Copolymers for Nonfullerene Polymer Solar Cells”,Energy Technology, vol. 8, no. 10, pp. 2000677, 2020.

[28] R. Pradhan, P. Malhotra, G. Gupta, R. Singhal, G. D. Sharma, A. Mishra, “Efficient fullerene-free organicsolar cells using a coumarin-based wide-band-gap donor material”, ACS Applied Materials &Interfaces, vol. 12, no. 37, pp. 41869–41876, 2020.

[29] J. Bhardwaj, R. Vishnoi, G. D. Sharma, K. Asokan, R. Singhal, “Mapping the local structure of fullereneC60 and Cu--C60 nanocomposite thin films by gamma ray’s irradiation”, Materials Chemistry andPhysics, vol. 252, pp. 123192, 2020.

[30] B. Wang et al., “Impacts of a second acceptor on the energy loss, blend morphology and carrierdynamics in non-fullerene ternary polymer solar cells”, Journal of Materials Chemistry C, vol. 8, no.34, pp. 11727–11734, 2020.

Page | 170

[31] R. Pradhan et al., “Energy-level modulation of coumarin-based molecular donors for efficient allsmall molecule fullerene-free organic solar cells”, Journal of Materials Chemistry A, vol. 9, no. 3, pp.1563–1573, 2021.

[32] M. R. Busireddy et al., “Non-fullerene all small molecule OBHJSCs with profound devicecharacteristics”, Nano Select, vol. 2, no. 3, pp. 549–560, 2021.

[33] P. D. Harvey, G. D. Sharma, B. Witulski, “Indolo-and Diindolocarbazoles in Organic Photovoltaic Cells”,Chemistry Letters, vol. 50, no. X, pp. 210050, 2021.

[34] M. L. Keshtov et al., “Ternary Polymer Solar Cells with High Open Circuit Voltage containing Fullereneand New Thieno [3’, 2’, 6, 7][1] Benzothieno [3, 2-b] Thieno [3, 2-g][1] Benzothiophene-basedNon-fullerene Small Molecule Acceptor”, Energy Technology, vol. 9, no. 5, pp. 2001100, 2021.

[35] G. Kumar, G. D. Sharma, F.-C. Chen, “Localized surface plasmon resonance of Au--Cu alloynanoparticles enhance the performance of polymer photovoltaic devices for outdoor and indoorapplications”, Optical Materials Express, vol. 11, no. 4, pp. 1037–1045, 2021.

[36] M. L. Keshtov et al., “New Dithiazole Side Chain Benzodithiophene Containing D--A Copolymers forHighly Efficient Nonfullerene Solar Cells”, Macromolecular Chemistry and Physics, vol. 222, no. 11, pp.2100053, 2021.

[37] M. Privado, P. de la Cruz, P. Malhotra, G. D. Sharma, F. Langa, “Influence of the dipole moment on thephotovoltaic performance of polymer solar cells employing non-fullerene small molecule acceptor”,Solar Energy, vol. 221, pp. 393–401, 2021.

[38] M. L. Keshtov et al., “Tetraperylenediimide derivative as a fullerene-free acceptor for ahigh-performance polymer solar cell with the high-power conversion efficiency of 10.32% withopen-circuit voltage over 1.0 V”, Optical Materials, vol. 115, pp. 111048, 2021.

[39] H. Dahiya, V. Cuesta, P. de la Cruz, F. Langa, G. D. Sharma, “Highly Efficient (15.08%)All-Small-Molecule Ternary Solar Cells Constructed with a Porphyrin as a Donor and Two Acceptors”,ACS Applied Energy Materials, pp. 4498–4506, 2021.

[40] G. D. Sharma, J. Yang, H. Jiang, C. P. Gros, R. Singhal, H. Xu, “High-efficiency fullerene free ternaryorganic solar cells based with two small molecules as donor”, Optical Materials, vol. 118, pp. 111217,2021.

[41] B. Soni, S. Makkar, S. Biswas, “Effects of surface structure and defect behavior on the magnetic,electrical, and photocatalytic properties of Gd-doped CeO2 nanoparticles synthesized by a simplechemical process”, Materials Characterization, vol. 174, pp. 110990, 2021.

[42] B. Soni, S. Makkar, S. Biswas, “Defects induced tailored optical and magnetic properties of Zn-dopedCeO2 nanoparticles synthesized by a facile sol-gel type process”, Journal of Alloys and Compounds,vol. 879, pp. 160149, 2021.

[43] P. Bhalla, N. Das, “Optical phonon contribution to the thermal conductivity of a quantumparaelectric”, Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter, vol. 33, no. 34, pp. 345401, 2021.

[44] H. Liu et al., “One-step solution-processed low surface roughness silver nanowire compositetransparent electrode for efficient flexible indium tin oxide-free polymer solar cells”, Thin Solid Films,vol. 718, pp. 138486, 2021.

[45] G. D. Sharma, R. Suthar, A. A. Pestrikova, A. Y. Nikolaev, F. C. Chen, M. L. Keshtov, “Efficient TernaryPolymer solar cells based ternary active layer consisting of conjugated polymers and non-fullereneacceptors with power conversion efficiency approaching near to 15.5%”, Solar Energy, vol. 216, pp.217–224, 2021.

[46] M. Privado, F. G. Guijarro, P. de la Cruz, R. Singhal, F. Langa, G. D. Sharma, “Fullerene/Non-fullereneAlloy for High-Performance All-Small-Molecule Organic Solar Cells”, ACS Applied Materials &Interfaces, vol. 13, no. 5, pp. 6461–6469, 2021.

[47] M. L. Keshtov et al., “Efficient ternary polymer solar cell using wide bandgap conjugated polymerdonor with two non-fullerene small molecule acceptors enabled power conversion efficiency of 16%with low energy loss of 0.47 eV”, Nano Select, vol. 2, no. 7, pp. 1326 – 1335, 2021.

[48] G. Marineau-Plante et al., “Effect of Mesogenic Side Groups on the Redox, Photophysical, and SolarCell Properties of Diketopyrrolopyrrole-trans-bis (diphosphine) diethynylplatinum (II) Polymers”,ACS Applied Polymer Materials, vol. 3, no. 2, pp. 1087–1096, 2021.

Page | 171

[49] G. D. Sharma, H. Dahiya, M. L. Keshtov, S. A. Kuklin, “Ternary Polymer Solar Cells Using Two PolymersP1 and P3 with Similar Chemical Structures and Nonfullerene Acceptor Attained Power ConversionEfficiency Over 15.5% with Low Energy Loss of 0.55 eV”, Energy Technology, vol. 9, no. 2, pp.2000926, 2021.

[50] V. Cuesta, R. Singhal, P. de la Cruz, G. D. Sharma, F. Langa, “Reducing energy loss in organic solar cellsby changing the central metal in metalloporphyrins”, ChemSusChem, vol 14, no 17, pp. 3494–3501,2021.

Conference[1] A. Agrawal., S.A. Siddiqui, A. Soni, G.D. Sharma, D.R. Shrivastava, “ZnO nanoparticles-based dye

sensitized solar cell: Fabrication and characterization”, AIP Conference Proceedings, AmericanInstitute of Physics Inc., Jaipur, India, 2020.

Department Of MathematicsBook Chapter[1] D. Dharminder, D. Mishra, “Construction of Identity Based Signcryption Using Learning with

Rounding”, In: Bhattacharjee A., Borgohain S., Soni B., Verma G., Gao XZ. (eds) Machine Learning,Image Processing, Network Security and Data Sciences, Communications in Computer andInformation Science, Springer, pp. 612–626, 2020.

Journal[1] N. Kundu, S. K. Debnath, D. Mishra, T. Choudhury, “Post-quantum digital signature scheme based on

multivariate cubic problem”, Journal of Information Security and Applications, vol. 53, pp. 102512,2020.

[2] S. Rana, D. Mishra, “Secure and ubiquitous authenticated content distribution framework for IoTenabled DRM system”, Multimedia Tools and Applications, vol. 79, no. 27, pp. 20319–20341, 2020.

[3] D. Mishra, S. Rana, “Authenticated content distribution framework for digital rights managementsystems with smart card revocation”, International Journal of Communication Systems, vol. 33, no. 9,2020.

[4] S. Rana, D. Mishra, “Efficient and secure attribute-based access control architecture for smarthealthcare”, Journal of medical systems, vol. 44, no. 5, pp. 1–11, 2020.

[5] V. Kumar, M. Ahmad, D. Mishra, S. Kumari, M. K. Khan, “RSEAP: RFID based secure and efficientauthentication protocol for vehicular cloud computing”, Vehicular Communications, vol. 22, pp.100213, 2020.

[6] D. Dharminder, D. Mishra, “LCPPA: Lattice-based conditional privacy preserving authentication invehicular communication”, Transactions on Emerging Telecommunications Technologies, vol. 31, no.2, 2020.

[7] D. Dharminder, D. Mishra, X. Li, “Construction of RSA-based authentication scheme in authorizedaccess to healthcare services”, Journal of medical systems, vol. 44, no. 1, pp. 1–9, 2020.

[8] P. Kumar, P. Garg, “Pseudo-completeness of the compact-open topology on C (X)”, Topology and itsApplications, vol. 277, pp. 107180, 2020.

[9] R. K. Dubey, V. Gupta, “A mesh refinement algorithm for singularly perturbed boundary and interiorlayer problems”, International Journal of Computational Methods, vol. 17, no. 7, pp. 1950024, 2020.

[10] S. Chowdhury, N. Nataraj, D. Shylaja, “Morley FEM for a Distributed Optimal Control ProblemGoverned by the von Kármán Equations”, Computational Methods in Applied Mathematics, vol. 21,no. 1, pp. 233–262, 2021.

[11] P. Mishra, V. Gupta, R. K. Dubey, “A mesh adaptation algorithm using new monitor and estimatorfunction for discontinuous and layered solution”, Numerical Algebra, Control & Optimization, pp.1–22, 2021.

[12] S. Kumar, V. Gupta, “An application of variational iteration method for solving fuzzy time-fractionaldiffusion equations”, Neural Computing and Applications, pp. 1–10, 2021.

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[13] S. Ku Sahoo, V. Gupta, “Second-order parameter-uniform finite difference scheme for singularlyperturbed parabolic problem with a boundary turning point”, Journal of Difference Equations andApplications, vol. 27, no. 2, pp. 223–240, 2021.

[14] V. Gupta, S. K. Sahoo, R. K. Dubey, “Robust higher order finite difference scheme for singularlyperturbed turning point problem with two outflow boundary layers”, Computational and AppliedMathematics, vol. 40, no. 5, pp. 1–23, 2021.

[15] V. Kumar, A. Sharma, A. Kumar, C. B. Gupta, “An inventory model for deteriorating items withmultivariate demand and trade credit”, Advances in Mathematics: Scientific Journal, vol. 9, pp.7501-7514, 2020.

[16] A. V. Jayanthan, R. Kumar, “Regularity of symbolic powers of edge ideals”, Journal of Pure andApplied Algebra, vol. 224, no. 7, pp. 106306, 2020.

[17] A. Kumar, R. Kumar, R. Sarkar, “Certain algebraic invariants of edge ideals of join of graphs”, Journalof Algebra and Its Applications, vol. 20, no. 6, pp. 2150099, 2021.

[18] D. Dharminder, S. Rana, N. Kundu, D. Mishra, “Construction of lightweight authentication schemefor network applicants using smart cards”, Sādhanā, vol. 45, no. 1, pp. 1–14, 2020.

[19] N. Kundu, S. K. Debnath, D. Mishra, “1-out-of-2: post-quantum oblivious transfer protocols based onmultivariate public key cryptography”, Sādhanā, vol. 45, no. 1, pp. 1–12, 2020.

[20] D. Mishra, D. Dharminder, P. Yadav, Y. S. Rao, P. Vijayakumar, N. Kumar, “A provably secure dynamicID-based authenticated key agreement framework for mobile edge computing without a trustedparty”, Journal of Information Security and Applications, vol. 55, pp. 102648, 2020.

[21] U. Kumar, M. Garg, “Learning with error-based key agreement and authentication scheme forsatellite communication”, International Journal of Satellite Communications and Networking, 2021.

[22] H. Trivedi, S. Veerabathiran, “Doubly commuting invariant subspaces for representations ofproduct systems of C*-correspondences”, Annals of Functional Analysis, vol. 12, no. 3, pp. 1–32,2021.

Department Of Humanities & Social SciencesBook Chapter[1] Payel Pal, “Differing Versions of Masculinity/ Femininity: Disrupting the Hegemonic

Representations in Contemporary Bollywood Films”, in Breaking the Glass Ceiling: Gender andCulture in Contemporary Literature, Author Press, pp. 2021.

[2] Shweta Pandey, Anna Kaushik, “Examining the impact of industry 4.0 on Academic Libraries”,Library and Information Science in the Age of MOOCs, Emerald, pp. 2020.

Journal[1] V. Kumar, M. P. Kaur, “Cloud computing and Libraries: A theoretical study”, GNIMS - International

e-Journal of Library Science, pp. 20–26, 2020.

[2] V. Kumar, P. Kaur, S. Pandey, “Awareness and Usage Pattern of Learner’s On eLearning Platform: ASurvey”, Library Philosophy and Practice (e-journal), vol. 4717, 2020.

[3] M. Dhariwal, “Women and Agency in Bankim's Rajmohan's Wife and Tagore's The Home and TheWorld”, Rupkatha Journal on Interdisciplinary Studies in Humanities vol. 12, no. 5, pp. 1-6, 2020.

[4] P. Pal, “Nostalgia, Identity, and Homeland: Reading the narratives of the diaspora in SusanAbulhawa’s fiction”, Journal of Postcolonial Writings, pp. 47-59, 2021.

[5] P. Pal, “Postcolonial Disjuncture: Kashmir as the ‘Other’ in Basharat Peer’s Curfewed Night”, TheJournal of Commonwealth Literature, 2021.

[6] S. B. Majumder, S. Bagchi, “Merchandise Trade Flow and Economic Growth: The Post WTO Era ofIndia”, Artha Vijnana: Journal of The Gokhale Institute of Politics and Economics, vol. 63, no. 1, pp.88-103, 2021.

[7] S. Bagchi, S. Bhattacharyya, “Industry-level determinants of India’s vertical and horizontal IIT”,Indian Economic Review, vol. 56, pp. 113–145, 2021.

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Conference[1] Rajbala Singh, Chanchal Singh, “The Mediating Effect of Psychological Empowerment on the

Relationship between Workplace Spirituality and Organizational Citizenship Behavior: AnInvestigation among School Teachers”, in Proceeding of 8th International HR Conference on Balancingthe Behavioural Continuum_From Pro-social to Anti-social Behaviour, Mumbai: Perfect Solutions andStationery, Mumbai, India, 2021.

12.3. Expert Talks by Faculty Members at LNMIIT/Other Institutes/Organizations

Expert Talks/ Invited Talks Duration Place/organized by Name ofCoordinator/s

“Computational Foundationfor Data Science (CFDS)”

26-30 July 2021 BHU Dr. SudheerSharma

“Blockchain” 15 June 2021 LNMIIT Dr. ShwetaBhandari

“Mobile and Cloud Security:Challenges and Directions”

3 June 2021 A. V. Parekh TechnicalInstitute, Rajkot, Gujarat,

India.

Dr. ShwetaBhandari

“Digital Forensics and CyberCrime”

27 May 2021 LNMIIT Dr. JayaprakashKar

“Digital Forensics and CyberCrime”

25 May 2021 LNMIIT Dr. Sakthi BalanMuthiah

Machine Learning and DataScience”

22 April 2021 G. H. Raisoni Institute ofBusiness Management,Jalgaon, Maharashtra

Dr. Saurabh Kumar

“Cyber Security” 9 April 2021 LNMIIT Dr. ShwetaBhandari

“Cyber Security oversight forInformation Protection”

12-16 July 2021 Cochin University ofScience and Technology

(CUSAT)

Dr. Vineeta jain

“CommunicationTechnologies and Protocolsfor IoT Devices”

12 February 2021 Dr Rajbir Kaur

&quot;Avoidance ofSport-related Injuries andSupport forRehabilitation andSport-specificTechnique-Correctionthrough a Hybrid IntelligentSystemApproach

19 September 2020 BITS Pilani Prof. RahulBanerjee

Privacy and SecurityChallenges in Internet-basedMultimedia Systems andservices (IWMA 2021)

4 March 2021 LNMIIT Prof. RahulBanerjee

Panic-Gogy: Perspective onOnline Teaching

14-18 December2020

IITR Prof. RahulBanerjee

Hyperspectral Images and itsApplications (IWMA 2021)”

6 March 2021 LNMIIT Dr. Aloke Datta

Page | 174

OpenCV for Computer Vision(IWMA 2021)”

3 March 2021 LNMIIT Dr. Preety Singh

Collecting and Analyzing IoTData using ThingSpeak(IWMA 2021)”

4 March 2021 LNMIIT Dr. Rajbir Kaur

IoT Emulation with Cooja(Basic and Advanced) (IWMA2021)”

4 March 2021 -4 March 2022

LNMIIT Dr. Saurabh Kumar

cyber Security – CurrentTrends and FuturePerspective”

17 December 2020 Guru Nanak DevEngineering College,

Ludhiana, Punjab

Dr. Saurabh Kumar

Talk: &quot;ModelingBiological Neuron andInformation Processing

21 November 2020 KIET, Ghaziabad Dr. SudheerSharma

Introduction to ImageProcessing, ImageMorphology andCompression

24-29 August 2020 PIET, Jaipur Dr. Preety Singh

Introduction to ImageMorphology

22 September 2020 PIET, Jaipur Dr. Preety Singh

Online Expert lecture on"Designing Ecosystems forContinuous Innovation"

14 August 2020 MME Dr. Vikram Sharma

Flash Talk Event 30-31 January 2021 ASME LNMIIT --

Expert Lecture on"Advancements in Roboticsand Control"

5 March 2021 MME Dr. Ashok KumarDargar

Expert talk on “IndustrialSafety”

17 March 2021 MME Dr. Vikram Sharma

Expert talk on “Supply ChainManagement and WasteElimination”

25 March 2021 MME Dr. Vikram Sharma

Expert talk on Concurrentengineering/ASME EFX

7 September 2019 ASME LNMIIT Dr. Ashok KrDargar

Invited talk on "NOMA in IOTnetworks"

17 August 2020 ECE Divyang R. Rawal

Mobile Robotics and Internetof Things

16-19 September2020

ECE Divyang R. Rawal

Mobile Robotics and Internetof Things

16-19 September2020

ECE Abhishek Sharma

Invited talk titled "UAVRelaying AssistedCooperative 5GCommunication" in AICTESponsored STTP on ArtificialIntelligence and 5GCommunication Technologyby Poornima University,Jaipur (India)

12 December 2020 ECE Anirudh Agarwal

Page | 175

‘Guest Speaker’ in theone-week online facultydevelopment program on“Recent Trends of ArtificialIntelligence in ElectronicsDevices and Systems”

19-24 July 2021 ECE Akash Gupta

Invited talk on "IoT andSecurity' at LakshmipatiUniversity, Jaipur

26 October 2021 ECE Abhishek Sharma

12.4. FDPs Attended by LNMIIT Faculty Members

Year Name of teacherwho attendedthe program

Title of the program Duration

Department of CSE

2021 Dr. Rajbir Kaur Workshop on 'Embedded Systems - AnApplication-Driven Approach organized byAICTE , ATAL Academy, STMicroelectronics andArm Education

25-27 August 2021

2021 Dr. Preety Singh Artificial Intelligence for Computer Vision(Elementary) AICTE Training And Learning(ATAL) Academy Sponsored Five Days onlineFDP

12-16 July 2021

2021 Dr. Sakthi BalanMuthiah

ACM Web Science Conference 21-25 June 2021

2021 Dr. Sakthi BalanMuthiah

Tutorial on Tracking the Trackers: Ethicalmeasurements of web privacy leakagesin-the-wild as part of ACM Web ScienceConference 2021

21-22 June 2021

2021 Dr. Sakthi BalanMuthiah

Mediate 2021: Workshop on News Media andComputational Journalism as part of AAAIConference ICWSM 2021

7-10 June 2021

2021 Dr. Rajbir Kaur Safe Campus program organized by Associationof Indian Universities and MFF

18-19 March 2021

2021 Dr. SaurabhKumar

Faculty Development Programme on“Information Security and Privacy (ISP)”

10-14 March 2021

2021 Dr. Rajbir Kaur Webinar on Big Data Fundamentals on AWS 01 March 2021

2021 Preety Singh Training program on "Data Science usingPython Programming"

21-26 February 2021

2021 Dr. Sakthi BalanMuthiah

Web Science for Development (WS4D), IIIT,Bangalore (Online Mode) - Theme: Web Sciencefor the new normal

19-20 February 2021

2021 Dr. SaurabhKumar

TEQIP (III) Sponsored Short Term TrainingProgramme on “Recent Trends and Applications

15-19 February 2021

Page | 176

in Machine Learning (RTAML)”

2020 Dr. Preety Singh 1-week short term course on "Advances in DeepArchitectures for Signal, Image and VisionApplications"

30 November 2020 -06 December 2020

2020 Dr. SaurabhKumar

Faculty Development Programme on UniversalHuman Values for Deeksharambh (S.I.P.)

123-27 November2020

2020 Dr. Mohit Gupta Indian Workshop on Post-QuantumCryptography (IWPQC 2020)

17-18 November2020

2020 Dr. SaurabhKumar

AICTE Training and Learning (ATAL) online FDPon “Internet of Things (IoT): Architecture &System Level Design”

14-18 November2020

2020 Dr. Pramod Gaur Internet of Things: Education Canvas 9-20 November 2020

2020 Dr. SaurabhKumar

AICTE Training and Learning (ATAL) online FDPon “Robotics”

2-6 November 2020

2020 Dr. Mohit Gupta Matches made in heaven: Cryptography andTheoretical Computer, IACR , TCC

16-19 November2020

2020 Dr. SaurabhKumar

TEQIP (III) Sponsored Short Term TrainingProgramme on “Data Security and Privacy(DSP)”

26-30 October 2020

2020 Dr. RahulBanerjee

Future-proof Your Teaching Skills 6-16 October 2020

2021 Dr. Preety Singh Workshop on "Practical Approach on ComputerVision"

29-30 September2021

2020 Dr. Mohit Gupta "Consensus Protocols in Blockchain" sponsoredby TEQIP

20 September 2020

2020 Dr. SaurabhKumar

12 Weeks NPTEL Online Certification MOOCProgramme on “Introduction to Industry 4.0and Industrial Internet of Things

14 September 2020 -02 December 2020

2020 Dr. Rajbir Kaur Raspberry Pi: A Practical Approach 20 September 2020

2020 Dr. Preety Singh Machine Learning: A Practical Approach 5-6 September 2020

2020 Dr. JayaprakashKar

Trends in Artificial Intelligence: A ModernPerspective

11 August 2020

2020 Dr. JayaprakashKar

Artificial Intelligence in Cloud Computing andInternet-of-Things

10 August 2020

2020 Dr. Sakthi BalanMuthiah

ACM HyperText 2020 13-15 July 2020

2020 Dr. SaurabhKumar

Online Webinar on "Introduction to MachineLearning"

6-7 July 2020

2020 Dr. Preety Singh Faculty Development Programme on “MachineLearning for Computer Vision”

29 June 2020 -8 July 2020

2020 Dr. SaurabhKumar

TEQIP (III) Sponsored Short Term TrainingProgramme on Recent Trends in IoTs and CloudComputing (RT-IoTCC)

29 June 2020 -3 July 2020

2020 Dr. Sakthi Balan RBCDSAI International Summit on Data Science 18-20 June 2020

Page | 177

Muthiah and AI

2020 Dr. JayaprakashKar

AICTE Training And Learning (ATAL) AcademyOnline FDP on "Data Sciences"

26-30 May 2020

2020 Dr. Pramod Gaur AICTE Training And Learning (ATAL) AcademyOnline FDP on "Data Sciences"

11-15 May 2020

2020 Dr. JayaprakashKar

AICTE Training And Learning (ATAL) AcademyOnline FDP on "Cyber Security"

30 April 2020 -4 May 2020

2020 Dr. JayaprakashKar

AICTE Training And Learning (ATAL) AcademyOnline FDP on "Blockchain"

20-24 April 2020

2020 Prof. Philip L.Miller

Possible work with the authenticateexamination center

14-15 February 2020

Department of ECE

2021 Dr. Sandeep Saini ATAL Sponsored FDP on “Artificial Intelligencefor CBSE Teachers”

7-11 June 2021

2021 Dr. AbhishekSharma

Embedded Systems-An application drivenapproach” organized by the All India Council forTechnical Education (AICTE), ATAL Academy,STMicroelectronics and Arm Education

25-27 August 2021

2021 Dr. AbhishekSharma

ATAL Sponsored FDP on Embedded Systems:Theory and Hands

4-8 October 2021

2021 Dr. Akash Gupta Next Generation Training and Research School,IITK

16 February 2021 -19 March 2021

2021 Dr. Akash Gupta Five Day FDP on MATLAB for Engineering andScientific Computations

21-26 February 2021

2020 Dr. Akash Gupta FDP on “Outcome based education and NBAAccreditation Process”

6-16 October 2020

2020 Dr. Akash Gupta One week FDP on SCILAB 25-30 May 2020

2021 Dr. Akash Gupta Intelligent systems for sustainable development 8-12 June 2021

2021 Dr. Akash Gupta National Level STTP on "UnderstandingBlockchain Technology and its Application"

15-19 February 2021

2021 Dr. Akash Gupta Smart Sensors Transform Health Care System,SVCET, Chittoor, Andhra Pradesh

3 July 2021

2020 Dr. AnirudhAgarwal

5-Day FDP by AICTE Training And Learning(ATAL) Academy in Online mode on "EmergingTechnologies (IoT, Robotics & UAV)"

12-16 October 2020

2020 Dr. AnirudhAgarwal

5-Day FDP by AICTE Training And Learning(ATAL) Academy in Online mode on "Internet ofThings (IoT)"

21-25 September2020

2020 Dr. Bharat Verma 5 days FDP on “Outcome based education andNBA Accreditation Process”

19-23 October 2020

2021 Dr. Bharat Verma 5 days ATAL FDP on "Reinforcement Learning anIt's Applications"

7-11 June 2021

2021 Dr. Bharat Verma 5 days online FDP on " Inculcating Universal 19-23 July 2021

Page | 178

Human Values in Technical Education"Organized by AICTE

2021 Dr. Chirag Kumar Trends for Industry 4.0 Beyond 2020:ElectronicsEngineering Perspective

15-20 March 2021

2021 Dr. Chirag Kumar A Five Day Hands on Workshop on NI GraphicalSystem Design Platform for EngineeringEducation and Research

1-5 March 2021

2021 Dr. Chirag Kumar Winter School on Wearable Sensors and Devices 6-7 February 2021

2020 Dr. Divyang R.Rawal

FDP on "5G Wireless Technology" Organized byInstitute of Technology, Nirma University

14-15 February 2020

2020 Dr. Divyang R.Rawal

5G Wireless Technology 14-15 February 2020

2020 Dr. Divyang R.Rawal

Invited talk on "NOMA in IOT networks" 17 August 2020

2020 Dr. GopinathSamanta

Design, simulation and measurement of differenttypes of antenna for 5G applications using HFSS

2-4 November 2020

2020 Dr. GopinathSamanta

Online Teaching-Learning Tools and Pedagogies,Professional Development Program

3-7 August 2020

2020 Dr. GopinathSamanta

Advanced Design in RF 16-20 November2020

2021 Dr. GopinathSamanta

Including Universal Human Values in TechnicalEducation

19-23 July 2021

2020 Dr. KanjalochanJena

FDP on “Blended Learning and FlippedClassroom”

10-14 August 2020

2020 Dr. KanjalochanJena

Digital tools for Writing, Authoring & ReviewingManuscripts

21 September 2020 -2 October 2020

2021 Dr. KanjalochanJena

Intelligent systems for sustainable development 8-11 June 2021

2021 Dr. KanjalochanJena

FDP on “Inculcating Universal Human Values inTechnical Education” organized by All IndiaCouncil for Technical Education(AICTE)

26-30 July 2021

2020 Dr. Nikhil Raj FDP on “Emerging Technologies in Engineering” 1-6 June 2020

2020 Dr. Nikhil Raj 5-Day online webinar on "KNOWLEDGESHARING SESSION ON RECENT TRENDS ANDITS APPLICATION IN ELECTRONICS"

3-7 May 2020

2021 Dr. Nikhil Raj Intelligent systems for sustainable development 8-12 June 2021

2021 Dr. Nikhil Raj 5-Day ATAL FDP on "Recent Advances andChallenges in Nanoscale Devices: Design,Materials, and Applications Perspective"

1-5 June 2021

2021 Dr. Nikhil Raj 5-Days National workshop on “Recent Trends inMicroelectronic Devices, VLSI Circuits & theirApplications"

25-29 June 2021

2020 Dr. Nikhil Raj FDP on “Outcome based education and NBAAccreditation Process”

19-23 October 2020

Page | 179

2021 Dr. Nikhil Raj National Level Workshop on ArtificialIntelligence

30 April 2021 -1 may 2021

2020 Dr. Nikhil Raj FDP on “Semester Long Workshop (TTW 20)” Jan - March 2020(LNMIIT)

2020 Dr. Nikhil Sharma FDP “Semester Long Workshop (TTW 20)” Jan - March 2020(LNMIIT)

2020 Dr. PurnenduKarmakar

5-Day FDP by AICTE Training And Learning(ATAL) Academy in Online mode on "DataSciences"

16-20 November2020

2020 Dr. PurnenduKarmakar

FDP on “Outcome based education and NBAAccreditation Process”

19-23 October 2020

2020 Dr. PurnenduKarmakar

5-Day FDP on “AICTE Training And Learning(ATAL) Academy Online FDP on "Internet ofThings (IoT)"

21-25 September2020

2021 Dr. PurnenduKarmakar

5-Day FDP by AICTE Training And Learning(ATAL) Academy in Online mode on "WirelessCommunication Technologies"

21-25 June 2021

2021 Dr. PurnenduKarmakar

5-Day FDP by AICTE Training And Learning(ATAL) Academy in Online mode on "Photonics"

28 June 2021 -2 July 2021

2021 Dr. Sandeep Saini ATAL Sponsored FDP on "Artificial Intelligencefor CBSE Teachers"

7-11 June 2021

2020 Dr. Sandeep Saini FDP on “Advanced Optimization Techniques andHands-on with MATLAB/ SCILAB”

13-24 July 2020

2020 Dr. Sandeep Saini FDP on “Outcome-based education and NBAAccreditation Process”

19-23 October 2020

2020 Dr. Sandeep Saini 25-Day FDP “Online Training program on DigitalCircuit Design and Verification using Vivado”

25 May 2020 -12 June 2020

2020 Dr. ShankarBhattacharjee

FDP on “Flexible and Wearable Antennas: RecentAdvancements, Fabrication Techniques andApplications” sponsored by AICTE Training AndLearning (ATAL) Academy

12-16 October 2020

2020 Dr. ShankarBhattacharjee

FDP on "Wearable Devices" 14-18 December2020

2020 Dr. ShankarBhattacharjee

FDP on “AICTE Training And Learning (ATAL)Academy Online FDP on- Wearable Devices”

16-20 November2020

2020 Dr. ShankarBhattacharjee

FDP on “Outcome based education and NBAAccreditation Process”

19-23 October 2020

2021 Dr. ShankarBhattacharjee

ATAL FDP on "Wearable Devices" 15-19 February 2021

2021 Dr. Vinay Bankey AICTE-ISTE sponsored induction/refresherprogramme Faculty Development Programme(FDP) on Cyber Security

6-10 April 2021

2021 Dr. Vinay Tiwari 5 day online FDP on " Inculcating UniversalHuman Values in Technical Education"Organized by AICTE

19-23 July 2021

Page | 180

2020 Dr. Joyeeta Singha FDP on “Blended Learning and FlippedClassroom”

31 August 2020 -4 September 2020

2020 Dr. Joyeeta Singha Online Training Programme on Digital Tools forwriting Authoring & Reviewing

21 September 2020 -2 October 2020

2021 Dr. Joyeeta Singha Intelligent systems for sustainable development 8-12 June 2021

2020 Dr. Joyeeta Singha Deep Learning and its Application, Conductionby IIT Roorkee

22-30 June 2020

2020 Dr. Nikhil Sharma PYTHON for 5G NOMA, Cooperative andCognitive Radio

21-30 December2020

2021 Dr. Nikhil Sharma PYTHON for 5G MU, Massive MIMO andmmWave MIMO

4-12 January 2021

2020 Dr. PurnenduKarmakar

AICTE Stakeholder Workshop 12 February 2020

2021 Dr. SoumitraDebnath

Photonics: Fundamentals & Applications 28 June 2021 -2 July 2021

Department of MME

2020-2021 Dr. Atul Mishra One Week Faculty Development Programme on“Advancement in Mechanical Engineering(AME-2021)

6-10 September2021

2020-2021 Dr. DeepakRajendra Unune

“Applications of Artificial Intelligence andMachine Learning in Mechanical Engineering”

12-16 January 2021

2020-2021 Dr. KamalKishore Khatri

Recent Advances in Renewable EnergyTechnologies for Sustainable Development

21-22 August 2020

2020-2021 Dr. KamalKishore Khatri

Biogas Technology for Waste Management 19- 20 March 2021

2020-2021 Dr. KamalKishore Khatri

Arduino and PLC based Automation in Thermal,Production and Automobile Field

19- 20 March 2021

2020-2021 Dr. KamalKishore Khatri

Enhanced Energy Saving in Waste WaterTreatment Plant Using Dissolved OxygenControl andHydrocyclone

8 August 2020

2020-2021 Dr. KamalKishore Khatri

Smart Wastewater Technologies for SustainableDevelopment/ Alliance for Rivers in India (AFR)

3 September 2020

2020-2021 Dr. ServeshKumar Agnihotri

Materials Processing & Characterization:Current Perspectives

31 August 2020 -4 September 2020

2020-2021 Dr. ServeshKumar Agnihotri

Image Processing and Algorithms using Matlab 17-21 August 2020

2020-2021 Dr. ServeshKumar Agnihotri

Advanced Optimization Techniques andhands-on with MATLAB/SCILAB

6-17 September2021

2020-2021 Dr. Vikas Sharma Vibration Analysis and Condition Monitoring ofRotating Machines/ TEQIP-3

5-9 October 2020

2020-2021 Dr. VikramSharma

Online Short Term Training Program (STTP) on“Sustainable Manufacturing for Atmnirbhar

21-25 December2020

Page | 181

Bharat”

2020-2021 Dr. VikramSharma

5-Day FDP on “3D Printing / AICTE Training &Learning (ATAL) Academy”

9-13 November 2020

Department of Physics

2020-2021 Dr. Manish KumarSingh

Short Term Course on “Current Trends inCondensed Matter Physics” sponsored byTEQIP-III

25-29 September2020

2020-2021 Dr. Manish KumarSingh

One Week Short Term Course on “Recent Trendsin Advanced Materials and Devices”

21-25 September2020

2020-2021 Dr. ManishKunmar Singh

FDP on "Functional Materials for EnergyEnvironment and Healthcare"

21-25 June 2021

Department of Mathematics

2021 Dr. Ajit Patel Workshop on Adaptive Finite Element Methods 2-7 July 2021

2020 Dr. HarshChandrakantTrivedi

5-Day online FDP on “Universal Human Valuesfor DEEKSHARAMBH”

23-27 November2020

2020 Dr. Ajit Patel Finite elements for Nonlinear & MultiscaleProblems

28 February 2020 - 3March 2020

2020 Dr. HarshChandrakantTrivedi

AICTE-ISTE approved onlineorientation/Refresher program on “Cybersecurity, Digital Forensics and BlockchainTechnology” organized by LNMIIT Jaipur.

7-12 December 2020

2020 Dr. HarshChandrakantTrivedi

5 days TEQIP-III Sponsored FDP on“Mathematical and Computational Modelling''organized by Rajasthan Technological university,Kota and Anand International college ofEngineering, Jaipur from 18.12.2020 to22.12.2020.

18-22 December2020

Department of HSS

2020-2021 Dr. Rajbala Singh Structural Equation Modelling Using Smart PLS 23-28 August 2021

2020-2021 Dr. Rajbala Singh A relationship between Trust and Psychologicalwell being among School Teachers

21-23 December2020

2020-2021 Prof. ManjuDhariwal

One week FDP on Remapping the Indian Novel inEnglish 21-25 June 2021

2020-2021 Dr. Payel Pal One week FDP on Remapping the Indian Novel inEnglish 21-25 June 2021

2020-2021 Prof. ManjuDhariwal

Safe Campus Program organized by Associationof Indian Universities and MFF 18-19 March 2021

2020-2021 Dr. UshaKanoongo

Safe Campus Program organized by Associationof Indian Universities and MFF 18-19 March 2021

2020-2021 Dr. Payel Pal UGC-HRDC One-Week FDP “LeadershipDevelopment Programme”

15-21 September2020

2020-2021 Dr. Anu Malik UGC-HRDC One-Week FDP “LeadershipDevelopment Programme”

15-21 September2020

Page | 182

2020-2021 Dr. Rajbala Singh National Webinar on National Education Policy2020 - Issues and challenges in Implementation 13-Nov-20

2020-2021 Dr. NarendaKumar DHOx2021 digital event 12-15 July 2021

2020-2021 Dr. Payel Pal ATAL AICTE FDP on “Leadership and Excellence” 7-11 September 2020

2020-2021 Dr. Payel Pal ATAL AICTE FDP on "Personal Effectiveness 7-11 June 2021

2020-2021 Dr. Usha Kanoongo National Webinar :Naya Kshitij: NEP 2020 forHigher Education" 7-Nov-20

12.5. Administrative Development ProgrammeYear Duration Title of the Programme No. of

participants

2020-2021 09-13 March 2021 Nvidia server training workshop 279

2020-2021 17-18 August 2020 -19-20 September 2020

Learning Management System (LMS) Training(17-18 August 2020 and 19-20 September 2020)

100

2020-2021 23 June 2021 Authorcafé- A suite of digital tools and services-to Enhance Research Productivity & Visibility.

14

2020-2021 3 February 2021 E- Invited talk on “Enhancing User Experiencethrough Technology in Academic Libraries: APractical approach”

33

2020-2021 3 June 2021 E- invited talk on “Understanding & AvoidingPlagiarism”

36

2020-2021 30 January 2021 Online session on “Unlock your researchpotential with IEEE Xplore"

30

2020-2021 8 May 2021 Online Training Session - IEEE Xplore ASPP –Delivering research better than ever - LNMIIT ,Jaipur

15

2020-2021 2 October 2021 Online Training Session on ‘Grammarly Platform’ 26

2020-2021 13 April 2021 Online Training session on the ‘TurnitinPlagiarism platform’

44

2020-2021 3 March 2021 Online Training Session on the 'Use of Web ofScience in Research’

25

2020-2021 4 June 2021 Author Writing IEEE Session 20

12.6. Invited Talks

Name of the capacity development andskills enhancement schemes

Date of implementation Name of the agencies/consultantsinvolved with contact details (if any)

Expert talk on "Industrial Safety" 17 March 2021 Mr. Ratish Choulkar, Sr. Vice President,Operations, Sigma ElectricManufacturing Corporation Pvt. Ltd

Expert talk on Supply ChainManagement and Waste Elimination

25 March 2021 Mr. Ratish Choulkar, Sr. Vice President,Operations, Sigma Electric

Page | 183

Manufacturing Corporation Pvt. Ltd

Expert talk on Designing Ecosystems forContinuous Innovation

14 August 2020 Dr. Ade Mabogunje, StanfordUniversity, USA

Expert talk on "Industrial Safety" 17 March 2021 Mr. Ratish Choulkar, Sr. Vice President,Operations, Sigma ElectricManufacturing Corporation Pvt. Ltd

Expert talk on Supply ChainManagement and Waste Elimination

25 March 2021 Mr. Ratish Choulkar, Sr. Vice President,Operations, Sigma ElectricManufacturing Corporation Pvt. Ltd

12.7. Conferences/Workshops/Seminars organized at LNMIIT

Name of the workshop/ seminar Duration Department/Cell Name ofCoordinator/s

Webinar: Executive summary of fewresearch problems

8 July 2021 CSE Dr. Preety Singh

Workshop on Big Data Analytics 3 July 2021 CSE Dr. Preety Singh

AICTE Training and LearningAcademy (ATAL) FDP on Blockchain

14-18 June 2021 Centre forCryptography, CyberSecurity and DigitalForensics (C3-SDF)

Dr. Jayaprakash Kar

AICTE-ISTE sponsored FacultyDevelopment Programme (FDP)Digital forensics and Cyber crime

24-29 May 2021 The Centre forCryptography, CyberSecurity and DigitalForensics (C3-SDF)

Dr. Jayaprakash Kar

AICTE-ISTE sponsored FacultyDevelopment Programme (FDP) onCyber Security

6-10 April 2021 Centre forCryptography, CyberSecurity and DigitalForensics (C3-SDF)

Dr. Jayaprakash Kar

Training Session on Nvidia DGX-1server

9-13 March 2021 CMLBDA + CSE Dr. Subrat Dash

Artificial Intelligence (AI): Past,Present and Future

6 March 2021 CMLBDA Dr. Sakthi Balan

International Workshop onMultimedia Applications (IWMA2021)

2-6 March 2021 CSE Dr. Aloke Datta

Hands-on session on “DeepLearning”

10 Faubrary 2021 CSE, InterMedia Group Dr. Suvidha Tripathi

Models and Programs: BetterTogether

9 January 2021 CSE Dr. SakthiBalan Muthiah

AICTE-ISTE sponsored FacultyDevelopment Programme (FDP) onBlockchain Technology

7-12 December2020

Centre forCryptography, CyberSecurity and DigitalForensics (C3-SDF)

Dr. Jayaprakash Kar

Page | 184

Socialising and Learning withMachines

27 October 2020 Center for MachineLearning and Big Data

Analytics

Dr. Sakthi BalanMuthiah

Machine Learning Applications inBusinesses: Some Use-cases

17 October 2020 Center for MachineLearning and Big Data

Analytics

Dr. Sakthi BalanMuthiah

AHA!!! Randomness !!!! 10 October 2020 Centre forCryptography, Cyber

Security & Digitalforensics

Dr. Jayaprakash Kar

Anonymity & Obfuscation 22 September2020

C3-SDF Dr. Jayaprakash Kar

Privacy issues: Anonymization andData Masking

22 September2020

Centre forCryptography, Cyber

Security & Digitalforensics

Dr. Jayaprakash Kar

31st Annual Conference of RajasthanGanita Parishad on Recent Trends ofMathematics in Sciences andEngineering (RTMSE-2020)

13-14 March 2021 Mathematics Dr. Vikas Gupta, Dr.Manish Garg, Dr.Harsh Trivedi

At the margins: Experience of Indianwomen in COVID-19

8 October 2020 HSS Dr. Payel Pal

COVID-19 Pandemic and itsEconomic Impact

28 August 2020 HSS Dr. Sagnik Bagchi

Narratives and their economicmarket values

14 September2020

HSS Dr. Payel Pal

Application of AI in Healthcare andData Analytics using Tensorflow

11 February 2021 ECE Dr. AbhishekSharma

Online Expert lecture on "DesigningEcosystems for ContinuousInnovation"

14 August 2020 MME Dr. Vikram Sharma

An International Webinar on"Energy Competence"

20 August 2020 ASME LNMIIT Dr. Ashok KumarDargar

An interactive session on Getyourself published

29 August 2020 ASME LNMIIT Dr. Ashok KumarDargar

Orientation programme of LNMIITASME Student Chapter

20 December 2020 ASME LNMIIT Dr. Ashok KumarDargar

Flash Talk Event 30-31 January2021

ASME LNMIIT

Expert Lecture on "Advancements inRobotics and Control"

5 March 2021 MME Dr. Ashok KumarDargar

Expert talk on “Industrial Safety” 17 March 2021 MME Dr. Vikram Sharma

Webinar on ‘Studying Abroad,Planning for the Next CareerMilestone’

21 March 2021 ASME LNMIIT Dr. Ashok KumarDargar

Page | 185

Expert talk on “Supply ChainManagement and WasteElimination”

25 March 2021 MME Dr. Vikram Sharma

12.8. Paper Reviewers in International and National Journals/Conferences

Sr.No.

Name of Faculty Department Name of Journal or Conference No. of PapersReviewed

1 Dr. Sakthi Balan CSE Online Social Networks and Media - Journal 1

2 Dr. Sakthi Balan CSE Disaster Medicine and Public HealthPreparedness - Journal

1

3 Dr. Sakthi Balan CSE 19th IEEE/WIC/ACM International Conferenceon Web Intelligence and Intelligent AgentTechnology

5

4 Dr. Sakthi Balan CSE KDD 2021 1

5 Dr. Sakthi Balan CSE ICWSM 2020 1

6 Dr. Sakthi Balan CSE WSDC (workshop as part of WEB SCIENCE2021)

3

7 Dr. Rajbir Kaur CSE IETE Journal of Research 1

8 Dr. Vineeta Jain CSE IETE Journal of Research 4

9 Dr. Vineeta Jain CSE IEEE Access - Journal 1

10 Dr. Vineeta Jain CSE International Conference on ComputationalIntelligence and Emerging Power System 2021

2

11 Dr. ShwetaBhandari

CSE IETE Journal of Research 4

12 Dr. ShwetaBhandari

CSE IEEE Access - Journal 1

13 Dr. ShwetaBhandari

CSE Transactions on Information Forensics &Security

2

14 Dr. ShwetaBhandari

CSE International Conference on ComputationalIntelligence and Emerging Power System 2021

2

15 Dr. ShwetaBhandari

CSE Computers and Security 1

16 Dr. JayaprakashKar

CSE IEEE Journal of Biomedical and HealthInformatics

1

17 Dr. JayaprakashKar

CSE IEEE Internet of Things Journal 1

18 Dr. JayaprakashKar

CSE IEEE Access 2

19 Dr. JayaprakashKar

CSE Sustainable Cities and Society, Elsevier 1

20 Dr. JayaprakashKar

CSE Peer-to-Peer Networking and Applications,Springer

1

21 Dr. JayaprakashKar

CSE Journal of Systems Architecture, Elsevier 1

Page | 186

22 Dr. JayaprakashKar

CSE IEEE Transactions on Communications 1

23 Dr. JayaprakashKar

CSE IEEE SYstems Journal 2

24 Dr. JayaprakashKar

CSE IET Information Security 1

25 Dr. JayaprakashKar

CSE Indocrypt 2021 3

26 Dr. JayaprakashKar

CSE Security and Privacy 1

27 Dr. Saurabh Kumar CSE Multimedia Tools and Applications, Springer 2

28 Dr. Varun KumarSharma

CSE Wireless Personal Communication,Springer, 2

29 Dr. Varun KumarSharma

CSE Peer to peer networking and applications,Springer

2

30 Dr. Varun KumarSharma

CSE IEEE Transactions on Signal Processing(IEEE),

1

31 Dr. Varun KumarSharma

CSE Fifth International Conference on ComputerScience and Application Engineering, October2021

1

32 Dr. Anu Malik HSS Academia Letters 1

33 Dr. Surinder SinghNehra

HSS SN Business & Economics 1

34 Dr. Ram PrakashSharma

CSE IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man andCybernetics

1

35 Dr. Ram PrakashSharma

CSE IET Image Processing 1

36 Dr. Anugrah Jain CSE IETE Journal of Research 2

37 Dr. Nitin Kumar CSE IEEE Transactions on Internet of Things 1

38 Dr. Nitin Kumar CSE IEEE Transactions on Medical Imaging 1

39 Dr. Nitin Kumar CSE International Conference on Medical ImageComputing and Computer AssistedIntervention – MICCAI 2020 and MICCAI 2021

8

40 Dr. Nitin Kumar CSE Indian Conference on Computer Vision,Graphics and Image Processing (ICVGIP)-2021

5

41 Dr. Anshul CSE Briefings of Bioinformatics 2

42 Dr. Anshul CSE IEEE Sensors Journal 1

43 Dr. Anshul CSE IEEE Journal of Biomedical and HealthInformatics

3

44 Dr. Anshul CSE IET Image Processing 1

45 Dr. Preety Singh CSE IEEE Winter Conference on Applications ofComputer Vision (WACV 2021)

1

46 Prof. G.D.Sharma Physics ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces 16

47 Prof. G.D.Sharma Physics ACS Applied Energy Materias 11

48 Prof. G.D.Sharma Physics Adv Functional Materials 8

49 Prof. G.D.Sharma Physics Adv Materials 12

50 Prof. G.D.Sharma Physics Adv Energy materials 7

Page | 187

51 Prof. G.D.Sharma Physics Dye and pigments 9

52 Prof. G.D.Sharma Physics J. Physical Chem. C 8

53 Prof. G.D.Sharma Physics J. Material Chem. A 13

54 Prof. G.D.Sharma Physics J. Mater. Chem. C 11

55 Prof. G.D.Sharma Physics Appl. Phy. Lett. 6

56 Prof. G.D. Sharma Physics Chem. Rev. 2

57 Prof. G.D.Sharma Physics European Commission project 6

58 Prof. G.D. Sharma Physics Russian Science and Technology, Mosocow 4

59 Dr. Ashok Garai Physics Physical Review E (APS, USA) 2

60 Dr. Ashok Garai Physics Essays in Biochemistry (Portland Press) 1

61 Dr. MahendraShukla

ECE IEEE Transactions on Vehicular Technology 7

62 Dr. MahendraShukla

ECE IEEE Transactions on Green Communicationsand Networking

2

63 Dr. MahendraShukla

ECE IEEE Systems Journal 4

64 Dr. MahendraShukla

ECE IEEE Access 4

65 Dr. MahendraShukla

ECE IET Communications 2

66 Dr. MahendraShukla

ECE Springer Wireless Networks (WINE) 2

67 Dr. MahendraShukla

ECE IEEE Wireless Communications & NetworkingConference (IEEE WCNC-2021)

2

68 Dr. MahendraShukla

ECE IEEE Global Communications Conference:Communication Theory (Globecom-CT ), 2020

2

69 Dr. GopinathSamanta

ECE IEEE Transaction on Antenna and Propagation 9

70 Dr. GopinathSamanta

ECE IEEE Antenna and Propagation Letter 2

71 Dr. GopinathSamanta

ECE Progress in Electromagnetic Research (PIER) 5

72 Dr. ShankarBhattacharjee

ECE IEEE Transaction on Antenna and Propagation 8

73 Dr. ShankarBhattacharjee

ECE IEEE Antenna and Propagation Letter 2

74 Dr. ShankarBhattacharjee

ECE Microwave and Optical Technology Letters 2

75 Dr. ShankarBhattacharjee

ECE International Journal of RF and MicrowaveComputer-Aided Engineering

7

76 Dr. ShankarBhattacharjee

ECE IET Microwaves, Antenna & Propagation 5

77 Dr. ShankarBhattacharjee

ECE Progress in Electromagnetic Research (PIER) 7

78 Dr. ShankarBhattacharjee

ECE Journal of Electromagnetics Waves &Applications

2

79 Dr. ShankarBhattacharjee

ECE IETE Journal of Research 4

Page | 188

80 Dr. ShankarBhattacharjee

ECE IEEE International conference on Control,Automation, Power and Signalprocessing-2021

3

81 Dr. AnirudhAgarwal

ECE IEEE Transactions on Mobile Computing 2

82 Dr. AnirudhAgarwal

ECE IEEE Wireless Communications Letters 1

83 Dr. AnirudhAgarwal

ECE IEEE Sensors Letters 1

84 Dr. AnirudhAgarwal

ECE IEEE Communications Letters 1

85 Dr. AnirudhAgarwal

ECE IEEE International Conference onCommunication (ICC) 2021

2

86 Dr. AnirudhAgarwal

ECE IETE Technical Review 1

87 Dr. Chirag Kumar ECE IEEE Transactions on Mobile Computing 2

88 Dr. Chirag Kumar ECE Ad Hoc Networks 1

89 Dr. Chirag Kumar ECE International Conference on communication,information and computing technology 2021

2

90 Dr. Chirag Kumar ECE International Conference on AI and SP 2021 1

91 Dr. Nikhil Raj ECE IEEE Access 4

92 Dr. Nikhil Raj ECE AEÜ - International Journal of Electronics andCommunications

4

93 Dr. Nikhil Raj ECE IEEE Transactions on Very Large ScaleIntegration (VLSI) Systems

1

94 Dr. Nikhil Raj ECE International Journal of Circuit Theory andApplications

1

95 Dr. Nikhil Raj ECE Indian Journal of Pure and Applied Physics 3

96 Dr. HarshvardhanKumar

ECE IEEE Sensors Journal 3

97 Dr. HarshvardhanKumar

ECE IEEE Photonics Journal 1

98 Dr. HarshvardhanKumar

ECE Applied Physics Letters 1

99 Dr. HarshvardhanKumar

ECE Nanotechnology (IOP) 1

100 Dr. HarshvardhanKumar

ECE Optical and Quantum Electronics (OQEL) 2

101 Dr. HarshvardhanKumar

ECE International Journal of Systems AssuranceEngineering and Management

2

102 Dr. Bharat Verma ECE ISA Transactions 8

103 Dr. Bharat Verma ECE Indian Chemical Engineers 1

104 Dr. Bharat Verma ECE IET Control Theory and application 1

105 Dr. Bharat Verma ECE IEEE transactions on Industrial Electronics 1

106 Dr. Bharat Verma ECE Discover Chemical Engineering 1

107 Dr. Bharat Verma ECE IEEE transactions 9n Energy Conversion 1

108 Prof. RanjanGangopadhyay

ECE IEEE Transaction on Wireless Communication 1

Page | 189

109 Dr. Akash Gupta ECE IEEE Access 1

110 Dr. Akash Gupta ECE Elsevier AEUE 3

111 Dr. Akash Gupta ECE IEEE Internet of Things Journal 1

112 Dr. Akash Gupta ECE Optical Engineering 1

113 Dr. Akash Gupta ECE Springer Multimedia Tools and Applications 2

114 Dr. Akash Gupta ECE IEEE Transaction of Vehicular Technology 1

115 Dr. Akash Gupta ECE IEEE Communication Letters 1

116 Dr. Akash Gupta ECE IEEE ANTS 2020 1

117 Dr. Akash Gupta ECE IEEE INDISCON 2021 3

118 Dr. Akash Gupta ECE IEEE ICVMWT 2021 2

119 Dr. Akash Gupta ECE IEEE Globecom 2021,2020 2

120 Dr. Akash Gupta ECE IEEE ICACCP 2021 1

121 Dr. Vinay KumarTiwari

ECE IEEE Transactions on Instrumentation andMeasurement

4

122 Dr. Vinay KumarTiwari

ECE Microprocessors and Microsystems 1

123 Dr. Vinay KumarTiwari

ECE National Power System Conference (2020) 1

124 Dr. Mohit Joshi ECE IEEE Transactions on Electron Devices 3

125 Dr. Mohit Joshi ECE IEEE Transactions on Plasma Science 4

126 Dr. Mohit Joshi ECE IET MAP 1

127 Dr. Mohit Joshi ECE Electronics Letters 1

128 Dr. Mohit Joshi ECE IEEE INDICON 2021 4

129 Dr. SuvadeepChoudhury

ECE IEEE Transactions on Antennas andPropagation

9

130 Dr. SuvadeepChoudhury

ECE IEEE Antenna and Wireless PropagationLetters

11

131 Dr. SuvadeepChoudhury

ECE IET Microwaves Antennas and Propagation 4

132 Dr. SuvadeepChoudhury

ECE IETE Technical Review 2

133 Dr. KanjalochanJena

ECE IEEE Transactions on Ferroelectric 1

134 Dr. KanjalochanJena

ECE Silicon 2

135 Dr. KanjalochanJena

ECE microelectronics 1

136 Dr. Vinay Bankey ECE IEEE Transactions on Vehicular Technology 5

137 Dr. Vinay Bankey ECE IEEE Communications Letters 3

138 Dr. Vinay Bankey ECE IEEE Wireless Communications Letters 2

139 Dr. Vinay Bankey ECE IEEE International Conference onCommunications in China 2020

1

140 Dr. Vinay Bankey ECE IEEE Journal on Selected Areas inCommunications

1

Page | 190

A few glimpses of the Conferences/Workshops/Seminars

Page | 191

13. INSTITUTE PUBLICATIONS

1. Institute Brochure 2020-21 2. Placement Brochure 2020-21

Page | 192

3. Newsletter: Library (Vol.-1, Issue-1) 4. Newsletter: Library (Vol.- 2, Issue-1)

5. Newsletter: Library (Vol.-2, Issue-2) 6. Newsletter: Department of CSE (Vol.-1, Issue-1)

Page | 193

7. Newsletter: Department of CSE (Vol.-1, Issue-2) 8. Newsletter: Department of CSE (Vol.-1, Issue-3)

9. Newsletter: Department of ECE (Vol.-1, Issue-1) 10. Newsletter: Department of ECE (Vol.-1, Issue-2)

Page | 194

11. Newsletter: Department of MME (Vol.-1, Issue-1) 12. Newsletter: Department of MME (Vol.-1, Issue-2)

13. SPARSH the Alumni magazine

Page | 195

14. PHOTOGRAPHS

Page | 196

Page | 197

Page | 198

Page | 199

EDITORIAL TEAM

Dr. Saurabh Kumar Assistant Professor Department of CSE

Dr. Shankar Bhattacharjee

Assistant Professor Department of ECE

Dr. Anjishnu Sarkar Assistant Professor Department of Physics

Dr. Dishari Chaudhury

Assistant Professor Department of

Mathematics

Dr. Anu Malik Assistant Professor Department of HSS

Dr. Vikas Sharma Assistant Professor

Department of MME

Mr. Dharm Pal Yadav Junior Technical Superintendent Department of ECE

Mr. Abhishek Jain Junior Assistant

Department of CSE/HSS/Mathematics

Mr. Kundan Singh Shahi Junior Assistant Department of ECE/Physics/MME