Dr. Amit Bhattacharyya | Nano Biosensing | Best Researcher Award
Haldia Institute of Technology | India
Amit Bhattacharyya, phd, is an academic and researcher in the field of electronics and communication engineering, With a strong focus on device modeling and nano-biosensing for scientific applications. He earned his phd from Makaut, west bengal, building on a solid foundation with an m.tech in radio physics and electronics and an m.sc in electronic science, both from the university of calcutta. His career as an educator spans for many years, including roles at Dinabandhu Andrews college, surendranath evening college, and haldia institute of technology, where he has contributed extensively to undergraduate and postgraduate teaching in electronics and engineering disciplines. his technical expertise covers programming in c, matlab, vhdl, verilog, and verilog-ams, along with proficiency in industry-standard simulation tools such as silvaco-atlas, spice, synopsys, and xilinx. His research productivity is well-recognized, with 23 documents, 329 citations, and an h-index of 8, reflecting both the quality and impact of his scholarly contributions. through his work, he continues to bridge advanced theoretical modeling with practical applications in nano-biosensing and allied areas, fostering innovation and inspiring future researchers in the rapidly evolving landscape of electronics and engineering.
Profiles: Scopus | Orcid | Google Scholar
Featured Publications
"Performance assessment of new dual-pocket vertical heterostructure tunnel FET-based biosensor considering steric hindrance issue"
"Analysis of partial hybridization and probe positioning on sensitivity of a dielectric modulated junctionless label free biosensor"
"Analysis of noise-immune dopingless heterojunction bio-TFET considering partial hybridization issue"
"GaAs0. 5Sb0. 5/In0. 53Ga0. 47As heterojunction dopingless charge plasma-based tunnel FET for analog/digital performance improvement"
"Sensitivity measurement for bio-TFET considering repulsive steric effects with better accuracy"