Jay Singh
Dr. Jay Singh is currently working as an assistant professor at the Department of Chemistry, Institute of Sciences, Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh, since 2017. He received his Ph.D. degree in polymer science from Motilal Nehru National Institute of Technology in 2010 and his MSc and BSc from Allahabad University, Uttar Pradesh, India. He had a postdoctoral fellow at National Physical Laboratory, New Delhi, Chonbuk National University, South Korea, and Delhi Technological...See more
Dr. Jay Singh is currently working as an assistant professor at the Department of Chemistry, Institute of Sciences, Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh, since 2017. He received his Ph.D. degree in polymer science from Motilal Nehru National Institute of Technology in 2010 and his MSc and BSc from Allahabad University, Uttar Pradesh, India. He had a postdoctoral fellow at National Physical Laboratory, New Delhi, Chonbuk National University, South Korea, and Delhi Technological University, Delhi. Dr. Jay has received many prestigious fellowships such as CSIR (RA), DST-Young Scientist Fellowship, DST-INSPIRE Faculty Award, etc. He is actively engaged in the development of nanomaterial (CeO2, NiO, rare-earth metal oxide, Ni, Nife2O4, Cu2 O, graphene, RGO, etc.)-based nanobiocomposite, conducting polymer, and self-assembled monolayer-based clinically important biosensors for estimation of bioanalaytes such as cholesterol, xanthine, glucose, pathogens, and pesticides/toxins using DNA and antibodies. Dr. Jay has published more than 95 international research papers with total xviii Editors' biographies citations of more than 4000 and an h-index of 36. He has completed/run various research projects in different funding agencies. He has many edited/authored books (under pipeline) and has authored more than 40 book chapters of internationally reputed press for various publications, namely Elsevier, Springer Nature, IOP, Wiley, and CRC. He is actively engaged in fabricating metal oxideebased biosensors for clinical diagnosis, food packaging applications, drug delivery, and tissue engineering applications. His research has contributed significantly toward the fundamental understanding of interfacial charge. See less