Indian Institute of Chemical Technology

The CSIR-Indian Institute of Chemical Technology is a national-level research center located in Hyderabad, Telangana, India under the Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR). IICT conducts research in basic and applied chemistry, biochemistry, bioinformatics, chemical engineering and provides science and technology inputs to the industrial and economic development of the country.[1] IICT has filed one of the maximum CSIR patents.[2][3][4]

CSIR-Indian Institute of Chemical Technology
CSIR-IICT
TypeAutonomous, Govt, CSIR
Established1944
DirectorDr. D Srinivas Reddy
Address
Tarnaka
,
Hyderabad

17.422114°N 78.539307°E / 17.422114; 78.539307
CampusUrban
Tarnaka
170 acres (690,000 m2)
Websitewww.iict.res.in
Indian Institute of Chemical Technology is located in Telangana
Indian Institute of Chemical Technology
Location in Telangana
Indian Institute of Chemical Technology is located in India
Indian Institute of Chemical Technology
Indian Institute of Chemical Technology (India)

Activities

The research and development programmes of IICT relate to the development of technologies for pesticides, drugs, organic intermediates, fine chemicals, catalysts, polymers, organic coatings, use of low-grade coals, and value-added products from vegetable oils. Process design and mechanical engineering design form an integral part of technology development and transfer. IICT is also actively engaged in basic research in organic synthesis and catalyses.[5]

Public health

An example of the institute's work is development of technology for accurate identification, of principal mosquito vector in rural endemic areas for designing suitable control measures of vector-borne diseases like malaria, filaria, Japanese encephalitis, dengue fever, etc.[6]

In developing countries like India, classification and identification of the mosquito species from rural endemic areas are of paramount importance. The World Health Organization monograph which describes the taxonomic data in the form of a pictorial key is generally difficult to understand by a non-taxonomist. Keeping this difficulty in view, a novel software has been developed which is user-friendly and menu-driven. The package can be successfully used in mosquito control programs in rural areas. Rapid identification and greater accuracy are the salient features of the technology.[7][8]

See also

References

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