Dr. sukesh sinha | Visionary Leadership | Lifetime achievement Award

Dr. sukesh sinha | Visionary Leadership | Lifetime achievement Award

National Institute of Nutrition (ICMR) | India

Dr. Sukesh Narayan Sinha is a distinguished scientist serving as Director Grade/Scientist-G and Head of the Food Safety Division at the ICMR-National Institute of Nutrition, Ministry of Health, Government of India. He holds B.Sc., M.Sc., and Ph.D. degrees in Chemistry from Bihar University, India, and has advanced training in analytical toxicology from the University of Helsinki, Finland, and health and safety from the CDC, Atlanta, USA. With over three decades of scientific experience, Dr. Sinha has significantly contributed to the fields of food toxicology, drug research, pesticide toxicology, and pharmacology. His pioneering work includes developing a new anti-malarial drug more effective and less toxic than primaquine, establishing health risk assessments for pesticide residues in beverages adopted by the Indian Parliament, and identifying novel biomarkers for organophosphate exposure. He has over 70 publications in reputed journals, has guided numerous Ph.D. and M.Sc. students, and has represented India internationally on toxicant regulation and health risk assessment. Recipient of the prestigious Shakuntala Amir Chand Award, Best Innovation Award (2023), and international fellowships from ICMR, DHR, WHO, and CDC, Dr. Sinha continues to advance research in medical toxicology and public health safety through impactful innovation and leadership.

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Featured Publications

Sinha, S. N., Vasudev, K., & Rao, M. V. V. (2012). Quantification of organophosphate insecticides and herbicides in vegetable samples using the “Quick Easy Cheap Effective Rugged and Safe” (QuEChERS) method and a high … Food Chemistry, 132(3), 1574–1584.

Sinha, S. N., Rao, M. V. V., & Vasudev, K. (2012). Distribution of pesticides in different commonly used vegetables from Hyderabad, India. Food Research International, 45(1), 161–169.

Sinha, S. N., & Nag, P. K. (2011). Air pollution from solid fuels. In J. O. Nriagu (Ed.), Encyclopedia of Environmental Health. Elsevier.

Sinha, S. N., Kulkarni, P. K., Shah, S. H., Desai, N. M., Patel, G. M., Mansuri, M. M., … (2006). Environmental monitoring of benzene and toluene produced in indoor air due to combustion of solid biomass fuels. Science of the Total Environment, 357(1–3), 280–287.

Sinha, S. N., Pal, R., Dewan, A., Mansuri, M. M., & Saiyed, H. N. (2006). Effect of dissociation energy on ion formation and sensitivity of an analytical method for determination of chlorpyrifos in human blood, using gas chromatography–mass … International Journal of Mass Spectrometry, 253(1–2), 48–57.

Dewan, A., Bhatnagar, V. K., Mathur, M. L., Chakma, T., Kashyap, R., Sadhu, H. G., … Sinha, S. N. (2004). Repeated episodes of endosulfan poisoning. Journal of Toxicology: Clinical Toxicology, 42(4), 363–369.

Assoc. Prof. Dr. Jie Liu | Risk Management | Best Researcher Award

Assoc. Prof. Dr. Jie Liu | Risk Management | Best Researcher Award

Kunming University of Science and Technology | China

Liu Jie is an Associate Professor and Vice Dean at the School of Public Safety and Emergency Management, Kunming University of Science and Technology, specializing in underground engineering ventilation, urban public safety, environmental air quality monitoring, and intelligent optimization algorithms. He earned his Bachelor and Master of Engineering degrees in Safety Engineering from Kunming University of Science and Technology and a Doctor of Engineering in Safety Science and Engineering from the University of Science and Technology Beijing. Following his doctoral studies, he completed postdoctoral research at the Postdoctoral Research Station of Mining Engineering, Kunming University of Science and Technology, including on-the-job training with the Yunnan Provincial Administration of Work Safety. He has held roles as Lecturer, Mine Safety Director, Deputy Director, Department Director, and Vice Dean, and has been recognized as a Yunnan Provincial Talent. Liu Jie has led and participated in multiple scientific research projects, including the Yunnan Provincial Key R&D Program on harmful air treatment in underground engineering, demonstrating applied solutions for plateau regions. His scholarly contributions include 94 documents with 6 h-index and extensive citations, reflecting his impact in safety engineering and public safety research. He also serves as an expert for the Kunming Emergency Management Bureau and Yunnan Occupational Health and Radiation Health. His work bridges academic research and practical safety applications, advancing innovation in environmental and occupational safety.

Profile: Scopus 

Featured Publications

Research on fire risk quantification for extralong highway tunnels based on Wuli–Shili–Renli theory, Dempster–Shafer theory, and Bayesian network. (2025). Reliability Engineering & System Safety, 2025(…), ….

Numerical simulation and experimental study on oxygenation of tunnel face in plateau tunnel construction. (2025). Tunnelling and Underground Space Technology, 2025(…), ….

Dr. Tse-Hong Chen | Decision-making and Problem-solving | Best Researcher Award

Dr. Tse-Hong Chen | Decision-making and Problem-solving | Best Researcher Award

Rregeneron Pharmaceuticals | United States

Tse-Hong (Aaron) Chen is a Principal Scientist at Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, specializing in analytical chemistry and separation science for biopharmaceutical development. He earned his Ph.D. in Chemistry from Purdue University, focusing on separation science within analytical chemistry. Over his career, Dr. Chen has led analytical method strategy, development, and tech transfer for diverse therapeutic modalities, including proteins, antibodies, ADCs, siRNAs, and peptides, guiding candidates from discovery through commercial launch. His expertise encompasses non-compendial assays for drug substance release and drug product stability, material comparability, CMC strategy, and regulatory support from IND to BLA. He has authored 12 peer-reviewed articles and holds two patents, with a citation count of 261 and an h-index of 8, reflecting the impact of his work. Dr. Chen has contributed to collaborative forums in biopharma analytical strategy, mentored scientists, and supported innovation in separation techniques for purity and quantitative analysis. Recognized for his leadership and contributions to drug development, he continues to advance analytical methodologies that ensure product quality and accelerate therapeutic pipelines. His work demonstrates a strong combination of technical expertise, strategic insight, and industry impact, positioning him as a leading scientist in pharmaceutical analytical chemistry.

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Featured Publications

Kwong, K. W., Chen, T. H., Luo, W., Jeddi, H., & Zhang, R. (2015). A biomimetic oxidation catalyzed by manganese (III) porphyrins and iodobenzene diacetate: Synthetic and mechanistic investigations. Inorganica Chimica Acta, 430, 176–183.

Chen, T. H., Yang, Y., Zhang, Z., Fu, C., Zhang, Q., Williams, J. D., & Wirth, M. J. (2019). Native reversed-phase liquid chromatography: A technique for LCMS of intact antibody−drug conjugates. Analytical Chemistry, 91(4), 2805–2812.

Chen, T. H., Yuan, Z., Carver, A., & Zhang, R. (2014). Visible light-promoted selective oxidation of sulfides to sulfoxides catalyzed by ruthenium porphyrins with iodobenzene diacetate. Applied Catalysis A: General, 478, 275–282.

Zhang, R., Vanover, E., Chen, T. H., & Thompson, H. (2013). Visible light-driven aerobic oxidation catalyzed by a diiron (IV) μ-oxo biscorrole complex. Applied Catalysis A: General, 464, 95–100.

Chen, T. H., Kwong, K. W., Lee, N. F., Ranburger, D., & Zhang, R. (2016). Highly efficient and chemoselective oxidation of sulfides catalyzed by iron (III) corroles with iodobenzene diacetate. Inorganica Chimica Acta, 451, 65–72.

Chen, T. H., Kwong, K. W., Carver, A., Luo, W., & Zhang, R. (2016). Enhanced iron (III) corrole-catalyzed oxidations with iodobenzene diacetate: Synthetic and mechanistic investigations. Applied Catalysis A: General, 497, 121–126.