Subhash C. Basak, Founder and Chairman of the Indo-US Workshop on
Mathematical
chemistry series, had the first idea of an Indo-US workshop after
participating at the First International conference on mathematical
chemistry, organized at the University of Georgia, Athens, USA, by
Professors R. B. King and D. H. Rouvray during 18-22 April 1983. During the 1980s, Basak
discussed the idea with his colleagues in USA, India and Europe who
reacted to it very positively. But the main hurdle was the substantial
amount of funding needed during those days to have an onsite
international meeting. Around 1986-87 Basak was appointed in a research
scientist position at the newly created Natural Resources Research
Institute (NRRI), University of Minnesota, Duluth. He was in the
environmental chemistry program of NRRI and would carry out research on
computational toxicology and development of novel graph theory
descriptors. Some results of that research were presented at the
International Conference on Mathematical and Computer Modelling
during the 1980s and 1990s and published in associated journal
Mathematical Modelling. Another forum for the dissemination of results of
mathematical chemistry research and publication was the Pacifichem
conference, a joint conference of all national chemical societies of the
Pacific rim countries. This was organized jointly by Professors
Haruo Hosoya of Japan, Milan Randic from USA, and Paul Mezey of Canada.
Since the early 1990s Subhash Basak had been discussing the idea of a
binational Indo-US mathematical chemistry workshop with top
administrators of NRRI/ University of Minnesota and received enthusiastic
support and financial backing to organize the first event in India. The idea
of an Indo-US Workshop was also supported by pioneers of
mathematical chemistry like Professors Milan Randic, Alexandru T
Balaban , Nenad
Trinajstic and
other reputed scientists from China, Croatia, Slovenia, etc., who
would regularly visit NRRI to do collaborative research with Basak’s
team at NRRI. Since 1990, during
his trips to
India, Subhash Basak discussed the workshop idea with various Indian
academic personalities. Finally, in 1997, he visited Vishwa Bharati
University where Professor Dilip K. Sinha was
the Vice Chancellor. Professor Sinha enthusiastically agreed to become
the Indian anchorman of an Indo-US mathematical Chemistry workshop.
Thus, on 9 January 1998, we had the inauguration of the five-day
First Indo-US Workshop on Mathematical Chemistry on the campus of
Visva Bharati University, Santiniketan, under the auspicious Mango
trees of Rabindranath Tagore,with the lighting of the holy lamps in the traditional
manner.
Professor D. K. Sinha was the Chairman of the event from India and
Subhash C. Basak of NRRI/ University of Minnesota, Duluth, was the
chairman of the first workshop from USA. You can see Professor Sinha, the then VC of Visva Bharati,
and Subhash C. Basak lighting the
lamps with Dr. Michael J. Lalich, Director of NRRI and Professor Milan
Randic on the Dias. This was a
highly successful workshop with speakers from countries of four
continents, viz., Australia, Asia, Europe and North America. Papers
presented at the meeting were published in American Chemical Society
publication: Journal of Chemical Information and Compute science
(JCICS) after peer review.
Subsequently, the Indo-US organizers had seven more workshops, the
second on the campus of the University of Minnesota Duluth (2000); the
Third Indo-US Workshop, at the University of
Minnesota campus in Duluth, Minnesota (2003); Fourth event of the
workshop series at the University of Pune, Maharashtra, India (2005); Fifth
Indo-US workshop on the campus of University of Minnesota, Duluth; Sixth
workshop at the Heritage Institute of
Technology, Kolkata, West Bengal India (2010); Seventh event of the
series on the campus of PRIST University,
Thanjavur, Tamil Nadu, India (2012).
For the First seven events of the
Indo-US Workshop on Mathematical
Chemistry series, Subhash C. Basak and Dilip K Sinha were the
Chairpersons for the events from USA and India, respectively.
Unfortunately, Professor Sinha passed away in 2021. Since then, Subhash
C. Basak is guiding the workshop series.
While the first seven workshops were in-person meetings,
the eighth
workshop was organized on virtual mode (online) centered around the campus of
Sharda University, Greater
Noida, Uttar
Pradesh, India during 13-17 September 2022. Papers presented at the
workshop are being published in the Journal of Mathematical Chemistry
after peer-review.
The Ninth Indo-US Workshop on Mathematical Chemistry, the Silver
Jubilee Year event, will be organized on the campus of Saranathan College
of Engineering , Tiruchirappalli, Tamil Nadu, India,
during 6-10 January 2025 as a mixed (in-person as well as a virtual) mode.
In order to mentor young students in the subject area, we developed
another conference series called “Indo-US lecture series on discrete
mathematical chemistry,” which had four events in the series—Bengaluru (Karnataka);
Kalpatta (Kerala); Tiruchirappalli (Tamil Nadu), and Hyderabad (Andra Pradesh).
It is noteworthy
that although the workshops were called Indo-US,
those were forums for deliberations by competent international
scientists. A review of the programs would testify that scientists from
4-5 continents participated in each event.
Because some researchers from South America were
coming to our Indo-
US events both in India and Duluth, MN, USA, it was felt that one N-S
America axis on mathematical chemistry was needed. Therefore, a new
workshop series “Mathematical Chemistry workshop of the Americas” was
created involving countries of North and South Americas. We had two
events in that series and based on the presentations had a two-volume
book “Advances in Mathematical Chemistry and Applications,“
published by Elsevier/ Bentham. Professor Dilip K. Sinha and Professors Basak and Sinha jointly
developed a conspectus (Pustikā, पुस्तिका in Sanskrit).
Saranathan College of Engineering is the brain-child of the great philanthropist Mr. K. Santhanam, a chartered accountant by profession. He named the college after his illustrious teacher (Guru) Prof. V. Saranathan, former Principal of National College, Trichy and an educationist par excellence of yester-years. The sprawling campus of the college is located on the Trichy-Viralimalai-Madurai National Highway (NH 45B). It offers ten Bachelor of Engineering programmes and five Master of Engineering programmes. Six of the ten Bachelor’s programmes are accredited by National Board of Accreditation (NBA), India. In 2021 the institution was accredited by National Assessment and Accreditation Council (NAAC), New Delhi, India with A+ grade in the first cycle itself. All departments are affiliated to Anna University, Chennai and approved by All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE), New Delhi, India. The college has a galaxy of well qualified and dedicated teaching faculty, spacious classrooms, smart lecture halls, conference halls, well-stacked library with online journals and well-equipped laboratories with advanced equipment for research and academic activities. The college is about 12 km from Tiruchirappalli International Airport (TRZ).