Muhammad Yousif | Materials Science | Innovative Research Award

Innovative Research Award

Muhammad Yousif
Affiliation Qinghai Institute of Saltlakes Chinese Academy of Sciences
Country China
Scopus ID 57211409200
Documents 19
Citations 156
h-index 7
Subject Area Materials Science
Event International Academic Achievements & Awards
ORCID 0000-0002-9151-0748

Muhammad Yousif

Institution: Qinghai Institute of Saltlakes Chinese Academy of Sciences, China

Muhammad Yousif is a researcher in the field of Materials Science, with scholarly contributions focused on advanced functional materials, nanotechnology, wearable sensing systems, environmental remediation, and smart textile engineering. His research integrates interdisciplinary approaches involving nanocomposites, graphene-derived materials, hydrogel-based sensing platforms, and textile-based electronic devices to address scientific and engineering challenges in environmental sustainability and intelligent materials development.[1]

Abstract

Muhammad Yousif has established a research profile centered on advanced materials engineering with applications in environmental treatment, smart sensing technologies, and wearable electronics. His publications demonstrate continued investigation into graphene-based nanomaterials, textile-integrated sensors, hydrogel composites, and functional fibers that contribute to modern materials science. The combination of environmental engineering principles and intelligent material design illustrates an interdisciplinary research approach consistent with emerging international trends in sustainable technology.[1]

Keywords

Materials Science; Nanotechnology; Graphene; Reduced Graphene Oxide; Smart Textiles; Wearable Electronics; Hydrogel Composites; Textile Sensors; Environmental Remediation; Dye Removal; Functional Fibers; Flexible Electronics; Advanced Nanocomposites.

Introduction

Recent developments in materials science increasingly emphasize multifunctional materials capable of simultaneously addressing environmental, biomedical, and electronic applications. Muhammad Yousif’s research contributes to these objectives through investigations into conductive textile architectures, responsive hydrogel systems, nanocomposite catalysts, and environmentally sustainable adsorption technologies. His scholarly work demonstrates the integration of chemistry, materials engineering, textile science, and sensor technology into practical engineering solutions.[2]

Research Profile

The research profile of Muhammad Yousif encompasses the design, synthesis, characterization, and application of advanced functional materials. His Scopus record reports 19 indexed publications, 156 citations, and an h-index of 7, reflecting consistent scholarly activity within the international materials science community.[1]

  • Wearable and flexible sensing systems
  • Graphene-based nanocomposites
  • Environmental wastewater remediation
  • Hydrogel-textile multifunctional materials
  • Fiber-based intelligent sensing technologies

Research Contributions

Among his recent contributions are studies describing aramid nanofiber adsorption systems for dye recovery, reduced graphene oxide hybrid yarn sensors for wearable devices, braided optical fiber sensing technologies, hydrogel-textile multimodal sensing platforms, and nanocomposite catalysts for degradation of organic pollutants. These investigations contribute to the advancement of sustainable materials, flexible electronics, and environmental technologies.[2][3][4]

Publications

  • Efficient, reversible recovery of anionic acidic dyes from water with aramid nanofibers. The Journal of The Textile Institute (2026). DOI:
    10.1080/00405000.2026.2670988
  • Scalable rGO–Ni Hybrid Yarn Sensors for Durable and Sensitive Wearable Electronics. IEEE Sensors Journal (2026). DOI:
    10.1109/JSEN.2026.3654231
  • Fiber Braiding Structure for Spatially Resolved Intensity-Modulated Liquid Level Sensing. IEEE Sensors Journal (2026). DOI:
    10.1109/JSEN.2026.3704258
  • A hydrogel–textile composite with synapse-inspired ionic multimodal sensing. Science China Materials (2025). DOI:
    10.1007/s40843-025-3644-9
  • High-performance catalytic degradation of rhodamine 6G dye by NiO/Reduced graphene oxide nanocomposite from the wastewater system. International Journal of Environmental Analytical Chemistry (2025). DOI:
    10.1080/03067319.2025.2532590

Research Impact

The published research has contributed to the advancement of environmentally sustainable nanomaterials, multifunctional sensing platforms, and flexible wearable systems. The citation profile indicates measurable scholarly recognition within materials science, particularly in emerging topics involving smart textiles, graphene-enabled devices, and environmental remediation technologies.[1]

Award Suitability

Based on documented publication output, interdisciplinary research scope, measurable citation performance, and continued contributions to advanced materials science, Muhammad Yousif demonstrates characteristics commonly associated with recognition under an Innovative Research Award. His work addresses practical scientific challenges through the development of advanced materials for environmental protection, sensing technologies, and wearable electronics while maintaining consistent scholarly productivity.[1]

Conclusion

Muhammad Yousif’s academic portfolio illustrates sustained contributions to materials science through innovative research involving nanomaterials, smart textiles, hydrogel composites, and environmental technologies. His publication record, citation performance, and interdisciplinary investigations collectively support his standing as an active researcher contributing to contemporary developments in advanced functional materials.

References

  1. Elsevier. (n.d.). Scopus Author Details: Muhammad Yousif, Author ID 57211409200.
    https://www.scopus.com/authid/detail.uri?authorId=57211409200
  2. Yousif, M. et al. (2026). Efficient, reversible recovery of anionic acidic dyes from water with aramid nanofibers. The Journal of The Textile Institute.
    DOI:
    https://doi.org/10.1080/00405000.2026.2670988
  3. Yousif, M. et al. (2026). Scalable rGO–Ni Hybrid Yarn Sensors for Durable and Sensitive Wearable Electronics. IEEE Sensors Journal.
    DOI:
    https://doi.org/10.1109/JSEN.2026.3654231
  4. Yousif, M. et al. (2026). Fiber Braiding Structure for Spatially Resolved Intensity-Modulated Liquid Level Sensing. IEEE Sensors Journal.
    DOI:
    https://doi.org/10.1109/JSEN.2026.3704258
  5. Yousif, M. et al. (2025). A hydrogel–textile composite with synapse-inspired ionic multimodal sensing. Science China Materials.
    DOI:
    https://doi.org/10.1007/s40843-025-3644-9

Wenbo Yu | Materials | Best Researcher Award

Prof. Wenbo Yu | Materials | Best Researcher Award

Prof. Wenbo Yu | Materials | Director at Beijing Jiaotong University | China

Prof. Wenbo Yu is a highly accomplished scholar and researcher in the field of Materials Science and Engineering, currently serving as a Professor at Beijing Jiaotong University, China. With a strong academic foundation and global research exposure, Prof. Wenbo Yu has made remarkable contributions to the synthesis, processing, and performance optimization of ceramic and composite materials. He earned his Ph.D. in Materials Science from Université de Poitiers, France, where he conducted advanced studies on the synthesis and mechanical properties of ceramics under the supervision of Professors Sylvain Dubois and Véronique Gauthiers. Prior to that, he obtained his Master’s and Bachelor’s degrees in Materials Science from Beijing Jiaotong University and Changsha University of Science and Technology, respectively. Prof. Wenbo Yu has held several significant academic positions, including Associate Professor and Postdoctoral Researcher at Tsinghua University, where his work focused on material forming and mechanical performance improvement. His research interests include ceramic composites, nanolaminated materials, MAX and MAB phases, thermal shock resistance, and additive manufacturing. With strong research skills in material synthesis, microstructural characterization, and mechanical analysis, he has authored more than 60 SCI-indexed papers with over 1,000 citations and an H-index of 22. His groundbreaking work has appeared in top journals such as Acta Materialia, Journal of the European Ceramic Society, and Journal of Alloys and Compounds. Prof. Wenbo Yu has been honored with prestigious recognitions, including the Beijing Rail Transit Outstanding Youth Talent Award and the Machinery Industry Award for innovation in high-pressure die casting. Through his teaching, research leadership, and collaboration, he has contributed significantly to the advancement of materials science both in academia and industry. In conclusion, Prof. Wenbo Yu stands as a leading figure in his field, dedicated to pioneering new frontiers in sustainable and high-performance materials research.

Profile: Google Scholar | Scopus

Featured Publications

  1. Hu, J., Li, S., Zhang, J., Chang, Q., Yu, W., & Zhou, Y. (2020). Mechanical properties and frictional resistance of Al composites reinforced with Ti₃C₂Tx MXene. Chinese Chemical Letters, 31(4), 996–999. (Cited by 122)

  2. Li, S. B., Yu, W. B., Zhai, H. X., Song, G. M., Sloof, W. G., & Van der Zwaag, S. (2011). Mechanical properties of low temperature synthesized dense and fine-grained Cr₂AlC ceramics. Journal of the European Ceramic Society, 31(1–2), 217–224. (Cited by 119)

  3. Yu, W., Wang, X., Zhao, H., Ding, C., Huang, Z., Zhai, H., Guo, Z., & Xiong, S. (2017). Microstructure, mechanical properties and fracture mechanism of Ti₂AlC reinforced AZ91D composites fabricated by stir casting. Journal of Alloys and Compounds, 702, 199–208. (Cited by 94)

  4. Yu, W., Li, S., & Sloof, W. G. (2010). Microstructure and mechanical properties of a Cr₂Al(Si)C solid solution. Materials Science and Engineering: A, 527(21–22), 5997–6001. (Cited by 89)

  5. Lu, X., Li, S., Zhang, W., Yao, B., Yu, W., & Zhou, Y. (2019). Crack healing behavior of a MAB phase: MoAlB. Journal of the European Ceramic Society, 39(14), 4023–4028. (Cited by 87)

  6. Yu, W., Mauchamp, V., Cabioc’h, T., Magne, D., Gence, L., Piraux, L., & Dubois, S. (2014). Solid solution effects in the Ti₂Al(CxNy) MAX phases: Synthesis, microstructure, electronic structure and transport properties. Acta Materialia, 80, 421–434. (Cited by 77)

  7. Lu, X., Li, S., Zhang, W., Yu, W., & Zhou, Y. (2019). Thermal shock behavior of a nanolaminated ternary boride: MoAlB. Ceramics International, 45(7), 9386–9389. (Cited by 75)