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Dr
Amit Chatterjee conferred fellowship of Imperial
College, London
February 17, 2005
Dr Amit Chatterjee, presently
engaged as adviser to the managing director of
Tata Steel has been conferred the fellowship of
the Imperial College, London recently. The fellowship
of the Imperial College is the highest honour
given by the college to a person of outstanding
distinction and with whom the college has close
association. Dr Chatterjee was associated with
Tata Steel for more than 32 years before his superannuation
from the post of technology officer.
Dr Chatterjee is a metallurgist
from the Banaras Hindu University and has also
completed his PhD degree from the Imperial College,
London in 1970. He joined Tata Steel in 1972 after
working for a couple of years in the LD shop of
Thyssen in Germany. He spent a large portion of
his career in Tata Steels R&D division.
Dr Chatterjee owes the credit of developing the
first indigenous coal-based direct reduction technology.
He was the founder managing director of what is
now called Tata Sponge Iron, a plant based on
the pioneering work undertaken by Dr Chatterjee
during his tenure in the R&D division.
In recognition of his outstanding
work on coal-based direct reduction and oxygen
steel making (with which he was associated both
during his PhD work and in Thyssen) he was awarded
Doctor of Science (Eng) degree by the London University
in 1988. He is one of the few recipients of this
unique honour in India.
A student of Loyola School,
Jamshedpur, Banaras Hindu University and Imperial
College, this fellowship completes a unique trio.
Dr Chatterjee was honoured as one of the outstanding
students of Loyola school during its centenary
in 1997. He was also chosen for the Distinguished
Alumnus of the Department of Metallurgy, Banaras
Hindu University in 1996. The late Mr Sumant Moolgaokar
and Tata Internationals present chairman
Mr Shymal Gupta (both alumni of Imperial College)
are amongst of the few from India chosen earlier
for this fellowship.
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