Sushanta Mitra
Sushanta Kumar Mitra is a Canadian mechanical engineer. He is an elected fellow of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, the Canadian Academy of Engineering, the Engineering Institute of Canada, Royal Society of Chemistry, the American Physical Society, the Electrochemical Society, and American Association for the Advancement of Science.
Early life and education
Mitra was born in India to a physicist father. He earned his undergraduate degree in mechanical engineering at Jadavpur University before traveling to Canada for his graduate degrees. Mitra enrolled at the University of Victoria for his Master's degree and the University of Waterloo for his PhD.Career
Upon completing his formal education, Mitra joined the Department of Engineering faculty at the University of Alberta. In this role, he led a CMC project to coax microorganisms to convert coal into methane. As a result of his research, he was named a Fellow of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers.York
In 2014, Mitra left the University of Alberta to become the Kaneff Professor in Micro and Nanotechnology for Social Innovation and Chair of Mechanical Engineering at the Lassonde School of Engineering. Upon joining the faculty, he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry and Canadian Academy of Engineering. He was later appointed the Associate Vice-President Research at York University. While serving in these roles, Mitra and his research team conceived of a method of detecting E. coli in contaminated water within two to 60 minutes based on the level of contamination called the Mobile Water Kit. In recognition of his research, he was the recipient of the 2015 Engineering Medal for Engineering Excellence and named a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. He was appointed as the President of the Canadian Society for Mechanical Engineering.Mitra continued to advance the Mobile Water Kit and, in 2017, raised $50,000 in seed funding through his co-started startup Glacierclean Technologies Inc. to further develop and test the Mobile Water Kit 2.0. The improvements in the newest kit enabled individuals, municipalities, or industries to test water at the source and receive results within minutes.