Subramaniam Ramakrishnan, born on 27 August 1960, graduated in chemistry from the SIES College of Arts, Science & Commerce of Mumbai University in 1980. He joined the Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay to complete his master's degree in 1982.[6] Moving to the US, he secured a PhD from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst in 1988, working under the guidance of J. C. W. Chien, and did his post-doctoral studies at the Corporate Research Laboratory of the Exxon Research and Engineering Company, New Jersey during 1988–90.[7] Returning to India, he started his career at the Indian Institute of Science the same year as a lecturer where he heads the Macromolecular Design and Synthesis Group as the chief designer.[2]http://ipc.iisc.ac.in/~rk/ During his tenure at the IISc, he held the positions of an assistant professor (1993–99) and an associate professor (1999–2005) before becoming a professor of the department of Inorganic and Physical Chemistry in 2005.[1] In between, he had two stints abroad, first as a visiting scientist at the University of Florida (2000) and the next, as a Philips Visiting Professor at Eindhoven University of Technology (2001).[6] Prof. Ramakrishnan also served as thedeputy director[8] at the Indian Institute of Science (2017-2019).
Legacy and honors
Ramakrishnan's research is focused on the study of molecularly designed polymeric materials and the development of synthetic routes such as the transetherification route developed by his team for preparing segmented polyethylene oxide and their analogues to be used as solid polymer electrolytes.[1] He is known to have succeeded in designing and synthesizing controlled polymer structures with predetermined properties.[9] His team has also demonstrated that the physical properties of conjugated polymers can be modulated by tuning the average molecular conjugation length. He has documented his research by way of chapters in books edited by others[10][11] and as peer-reviewed articles;[12]Google Scholar, an online repository of scientific articles has listed 121 of them.[13]