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International Research Journal of Scientific Reports and Reviews

Yagyavalkya Sharma

Author Profile
Department of Biotechnology and Microbiology, Kalp Laboratories, Mathura, Uttar pradesh
3
Publications
1
Years Active
12
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102
Citations

Publications by Yagyavalkya Sharma

3 publications found • Active 2026-2026

2026

3 publications

DETERMINATION OF BIOACTIVE COMPOUNDS THROUGH GAS CHROMATOGRAPHY-MASS SPECTROMETRY IN MORINGA OLEIFERA LEAVES

with Ruchi Agrawal, Dr. Parul Trivedi, Hemlata Bhatt, Dr. Rahul Shivaji Adnaik
3/3/2026

Medicinal plants have been well documented for their therapeutic and nutritional significance, and among them, Moringa oleifera Lam., also referred to as the "Miracle Tree," possesses high value due to its multifaceted pharmacological activities and profuse phytochemical makeup. Identification and characterization of bioactive molecules in the petroleum ether extract from the leaves of M. oleifera were conducted in the present work utilizing Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry (GC-MS) and the potential pharmacological significance was appraised. Fresh M. oleifera leaves were procured from Chaksu, Rajasthan, authenticated, shade-dried, and pulverized, after which petroleum ether extraction was carried out through maceration. The resulting extract was subjected to GC-MS analysis and the constituents were detected by matching the retention times and mass spectra with the NIST library database. GC-MS profiling indicated a number of bioactive molecules such as stearic acid esters derivatives, carvacrol, heterocycles with boron, and bisphenol A, which possessed pharmacological activities such as antimicrobial, antioxidant, hypocholesterolemic, anticancer, and cardioprotective activities. Detection of bisphenol A stands out in view of possible environmental degradation and points up the requirement for strict quality assurance in medicinal plant research. In totality, the result verifies the fact that M. oleifera leaves are a superior storehouse of bioactive molecules with possible medicinal usage; whereas molecules such as carvacrol and stearic acid esters justify the folk usage of the plant, the detection of the toxin bisphenol A points up the importance of stringent phytochemical and safety analysis.

MICROBIAL ECOLOGY OF DENITRIFICATION PROCESS AND ITS APPLICATION IN WASTEWATER TREATMENT: CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES

with Dr. Neetu Pandey, Wankasaki Lytand, Ritu Singh, Praveen Kumar
3/3/2026

Denitrification is a critical microbial process for nitrogen removal in wastewater treatment, offering a cost-effective and sustainable alternative to conventional chemical and physical methods. This review synthesizes current knowledge on the microbial ecology of denitrification, focusing on the diversity, physiology, and community dynamics of denitrifiers in biofilms and activated sludge systems. Key bacterial genera, including Pseudomonas, Paracoccus, Hyphomicrobium, Comamonas, and Azoarcus, play dominant roles, with carbon sources such as methanol, ethanol, acetate, and waste-derived substrates strongly shaping community structure and function. Advances in molecular approaches—such as PCR-based techniques, stable isotope probing, fluorescence in situ hybridization, metagenomics, and transcriptomics—have provided new insights into microbial diversity, gene expression, and metabolic pathways, linking ecological patterns with treatment performance. Applications of denitrification span conventional activated sludge processes, biofilm reactors, and emerging autotrophic methods such as anammox, which enhance nitrogen removal efficiency. Despite these advances, operational challenges remain, including incomplete denitrification, seasonal failures, greenhouse gas emissions, and limited predictability of microbial responses to environmental shifts. Integrating molecular data into process models and optimizing carbon source utilization represent key strategies for future improvement. This review highlights the opportunities and challenges in bridging microbial ecology with engineering practices, ultimately advancing wastewater treatment technologies toward greater sustainability and resilience.

A COMPARATIVE STUDY TO MEASURE THE SUSTAINABILITY OF EXISTING RENEWABLE ENERGY SYSTEMS AND NON-CONVENTIONAL ENERGY SOURCE

with Praveen Kumar, Dr. Neetu Pandey, Vipin Saini, Mradul Saini, Ruchi Malhotra, Dr. Sandeep Rout
3/3/2026

The global energy landscape is undergoing a crucial shift brought on by increased fossil fuel demand, environmental damage, and the need to tackle climate change. Traditional fossil fuel and nuclear energy systems have been generally dependable in the past, although there are ever-increasing worries about carbon emissions, environmental hazard, and resource availability. Renewable energy technologies including solar, wind, hydro, geothermal, and biomass represent scalable, sustainable, and low-cost alternatives as a result of technological advancements and reduced costs. Nevertheless, challenges relating to storage capabilities, intermittency of supply, and infrastructural integration remain. Furthermore, non-conventional technologies including tidal, wave, ocean thermal, micro-hydro, and second-generation bioenergy, are advancing and will provide additional diversity in energy sources in due course. This review highlights the performance, economics, social and environmental implications, and sustainability of traditional, renewable, and non-conventional energy systems. It is concluded that renewable energy represents the most immediate and practical pathway for sustainable energy transitions, while non-conventional technology can also be complementary as technologies and policies develop.

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