Liu Receives Research Grant

Yingtao LiuAME Assistant Professor Yingtao Liu received a $15,000 research grant from the OU Research Council Faculty Investment Program to develop novel polymers with self-healing capability. Once complete, this exploratory project will be a solid foundation for the design, fabrication and development of multifunctional polymers and composites for aerospace, mechanical and civil engineering applications.

“We will focus on the synthesis and characterization of self-healing polymers in this project,” said Liu. “The self-healing process of the proposed polymers will mimic the biological systems that can autonomously repair the physical damage and recover the load ability after damage.”

Liu’s long term career goal is to develop an adaptive structural health management system for multi-physics damage diagnosis and prognosis by combining multifunctional materials, intelligent and multi-scale sensing, nondestructive evaluation, multi-scale and probabilistic modeling into a general framework. The successful development of intelligent materials and structural systems will be a game changing improvement of damage diagnosis, structural maintenance and risk management for various engineering applications. This project, which focuses on the self-healing capability, is one of the key elements in Liu’s long term research plan.

Lai Appointed Associate Editor

Dr. Feng C. LaiAME Professor Dr. Feng C. Lai was appointed as Associate Editor of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) Journal of Thermophysics and Heat Transfer. Dr. Lai’s term will begin immediately and last through December 2017. As an Associate Editor, Dr. Lai will have the unique opportunity to serve his fellow engineers and scientists in the field of aerospace.

Congratulations, Dr. Lai!

AME Kudos

As the School of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering continues to grow, the faculty and students keep things exciting with great accomplishments and honors. We want to recognize some of the recent accomplishments with AME kudos’.

  • Dr. Rong Gan and Dr. Takumi Hawa for receiving $619,001 from the U.S. Department of Defense, Army Medical Research Acquisition Activity for their research project, “Biomechanical Modeling and Measurement of Blast Injury and Hearing Protection Mechanisms.”
  • Dr. Li Song for receiving $272,020 from the U.S. Department of Defense for her research project, “Demonstration of a Building Automation System Embedded Performance Degradation Detector Using Virtual Water/Air Flow Meters.”
  • Joshua Page, senior in Aerospace Engineering, was selected as one of 52 Air Force ROTC cadets from across the nation to attend the Euro-NATA Joint Jet Pilot Training Program. His selection to the program was recently featured in the Norman Transcript: http://www.normantranscript.com/news/article_c1ea4390-441e-11e4-a70a-c30ca12f481e.html
  • Arun Balakrishnan, Ph.D. candidate in Aerospace Engineering, (Faculty Advisor: S.R. Gollahalli) for receiving a Robberson Conference Presentation & Creative Exhibition Travel Grant in the amount of $500.
  • Juan Felipe Correa Pugliese, M.S. candidate in Mechanical Engineering, (Faculty Advisor: Wilson Merchan-Merchan) for receiving a Robberson Conference Presentation & Creative Exhibition Travel Grant in the amount of $500.

AME Director Wins Award

Farrokh Mistree award

AME Director and LA Comp Chair Farrokh Mistree’s passion is to have fun while providing an opportunity for his students to learn how to define and achieve their dreams.  He can often be heard throughout corridors of Felgar Hall urging students to get advanced degrees, loudly exclaiming, “Being a professor is the best job in the world!”

Mistree’s success as an engineer and educator was recognized once again this year when he was named a 2012 distinguished alumnus of his alma mater, Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur.  He accepted the award in India from Shri Pranab Mukherjee, president of India.

This commendation was bestowed to a select group of alumni.   Among the other recipients are deans and directors of colleges, presidents of large corporations, and researchers on the forefront of discoveries in fields like technology, engineering and medicine.

“This is a great honor,” said Mistree.  “To be recognized by the institution that was the foundation for my career, and to be named among such an esteemed group of individuals, is at once humbling and an immense honor.”

In 1967 Mistree received a bachelor’s of technology degree with honors in naval architecture from IIT Kharagpur.  While a student, he helped found a monthly news magazine called IMPACT, and was later asked to serve as editor-in-chief of Udhyog, an annual magazine.  He was the recipient of the General Proficiency Award and received the Best Thesis in Naval Architecture Award.

Mistree went on to receive a Ph.D. in Engineering from the University of California at Berkley.    Prior to coming to the University of Oklahoma, Norman he spent 17 years at the Georgia Institute of Technology Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering, and served as the school’s associate chair.

Throughout his long and prestigious career, he has co-authored two textbooks, one monograph, and more than 350 technical papers dealing with the design of mechanical, thermal and structural systems, ships and aircraft.  He has supervised 28 doctoral students and more than 50 master’s students, all of whom are well-placed around the world.  Twelve of his doctoral students are pursuing highly successful careers in academia.  He mentored two students who now own several for-profit colleges in Orissa, India.

 

 

 

Promotions and Tenure: Congratulations Faculty

Congratulations to AME faculty members who were promoted and who received tenure!

Peter Attar, Ph.D. Aerospace Engineering
Promoted to associate professor and received tenure

 

 

 

 

 

 

Wilson Merchán-Merchán, Ph.D. – Mechanical Engineering
Promoted to associate professor and received tenure

 

 

 

 

 

 

Mrinal Saha, Ph.D. – Mechanical Engineering
Promoted to associate professor and received tenure

 

 

 

 

 

 

Professor – Zahed Siddique, Ph.D. – Mechanical Engineering
Promoted to full professor

 

 

 

 

 

 

Associate Professor – Prakash Vedula, Ph.D. – Aerospace Engineering
Promoted to associate professor and received tenure

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

AME Alum: Congratulations Brad!

Brad PerryAME spring 2012 mechanical engineering graduate Bradley Perry from Yukon, Okla., received the prestigious National Science Foundation Research Fellowship.

The fellowship allows Perry to go to any graduate school, and will pay for all tuition and fees, along with a stipend for living expenses.  It also will give him access to travel funds and use of a super computer for research.

Multiple schools recruited Perry, but in the end he chose the University of California at Berkeley.

Perry wants to be an engineering professor, a goal he decided upon after spending time with AME associate professor of Aerospace Engineering, Peter Attar.

“I started doing undergraduate research for Dr. Attar.  He really cares about his students.  He cares about them understanding the theory behind the research.  I became a better researcher under Dr. Attar, and I realized I wanted to be like him and understand the theory behind everything I do,” said Perry.

While an AME student, Perry was also an active member of the Sooner Off Road student competition team.

AME Student Named Outstanding Senior

MartinezMechanical Engineering student Moises Martinez was named the 2011-2012 Outstanding Senior for the College of Engineering. He served as a representative of the College of Engineering Class of 2012 at Commencement and Convocation ceremonies in May.

Coming to the University of Oklahoma from Mustang, Okla., Moises has contributed his time and leadership to a variety of campus and community organizations, including the Multicultural Engineering Program, Society of Hispanic Professional Engineers, Dean’s Leadership Class, and The Big Event. Among his awards, he was cited as a National Hispanic Scholar, ConocoPhillips Spirit Scholar, and Outstanding Junior in Mechanical Engineering, and he was awarded the Dean’s Advisory Board on Diversity Wayne Steen Scholarship.  He is now employed with Shell.

Dr. Gollahalli Named AIAA Fellow

Gollahalli
The American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics recently announced that S.R. Gollahalli, AME professor, Lesch Centennial Chair and former AME director, was selected to become an AIAA Fellow in 2012. He will be honored at a Gala in Washington, DC later this year.

This distinction, among the highest honors that can be bestowed upon an aerospace professional, places Gollahalli in a small and elite group of aerospace professionals throughout the world selected for their notable and valuable contributions to the arts, sciences, or technology of aeronautics and astronautics.

“Sub Gollahalli is a wonderful ambassador for the engineering profession and the OU College of Engineering. His technical expertise in the field of combustion is vital to aerospace propulsion systems. He led the School of Aerospace & Mechanical Engineering during a very important period of research, teaching and technology innovation. His students are in many technical and managerial leadership positions around the world,” said Tom Landers, dean of the College of Engineering.

Gollahalli came to the University of Oklahoma in 1976. He is an internationally recognized authority in the fields of energy and combustion, and from 2001-2009, he served two consecutive terms as AME director.

In 1991, Gollahalli was named a fellow of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME). Among his notable achievements are the 2005 George Westinghouse Gold medal by ASME for his life time contributions to the power area, and the 2001 Energy Systems Award from AIAA for distinguished contributions to education, research, professional service and advancement of the field of energy and combustion. He is also a recipient of the university’s top teaching award.

Dr. Gollahalli in his combustion lab

In his role as a full-time teacher for 45 years, Gollahalli has mentored 80 graduate students and dozens of undergraduate students in his research lab. He has also mentored several post-doctoral fellows and junior faculty members involving them in his research.

“Dr. Gollahalli taught me not only combustion, but how to be a responsible researcher. Whatever success I have is because he trained me,” said Ahsan Choudhuri, chair of the Department of Mechanical Engineering at the University of Texas at El Paso who studied under Gollahalli for his master’s and doctorate degrees.

Dr. Gollahalli remains a favorite professor at AME, and continues to influence the field of combustion, clean energy and power, while also influencing the lives of his students.