Yogesh Jaluria

Professor Yogesh Jaluria is Board of Governors Professor and Distinguished Professor at Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey, in the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering. He is a specialist in thermal sciences and engineering [1].

Biography

Professor Jaluria was born in India, where he received his B.S. degree in Mechanical Engineering in 1970 from the Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi. He received his M.S. and Ph.D. degrees from Cornell University in 1972 and 1974, respectively.

He was a Member of the Research Staff at Bell Labs, Princeton from 1974 to 1976). He then returned to India to take an academic position at the Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur, India (1976-80), before returning to the US, and joining Rutgers University. At Rutgers, he has served as Department Chair, and Dean of Engineering. He was made a Distinguished Professor in 1991 and was appointed as Board of Governors Professor in 2001 [2].

Professional work

Jaluria is known for his work on natural convection, or buoyancy-driven flows. He wrote the first book on this topic and was a co-author of a later extensive treatise on the subject [3, 4]. Both of these books were translated into Russian. He has worked in the areas of computational fluid dynamics and heat transfer, materials processing, such as optical fiber drawing [5], chemical vapor deposition and polymer extrusion, optimization of thermal systems [6], cooling of electronic systems, solar energy, and building fires [7]. His most significant specific work includes the determination of feasible and optimal conditions in thermal processing, methods for cooling electronic systems, basic understanding of transition to turbulence and effects of stratification and conjugate transport, multiscale modeling and quantification of mixing processes in extrusion. He has contributed over 450 articles, including over 200 in peer-reviewed archival journal articles, authored or co-authored 8 books, and edited or co-edited 7 books.

Honors

Jaluria has received the Max Jakob Memorial Award [8], the highest honor in this field, from the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) as well as its Freeman Scholar Award [9], Worcester Reed Warner Medal [10] and the Heat Transfer Memorial Award [11]; the Society made him an honorary member in 2012 [13]. He received the Donald Q. Kern Award from the American Institute of Chemical Engineers (AIChE), and the Luikov Medal from the International Center for Heat and Mass Transfer. He gave the ASME Richard Henry Thurston Award Lecture "Buoyancy-Induced Flows in Nature and Technology" in 2003 [12]. He is also a Fellow of the American Physical Society and of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

He received the Distinguished Alumni Award from IIT in 1994, and the Daniel Gorenstein Memorial Award from Rutgers in 2010.

He was the Editor of ASME Journal of Heat Transfer from 2005 to 2010 [14, 15]. During that time, he was instrumental in founding a new archival ASME journal, Journal of Thermal Science and Engineering Applications He is presently the President of the American Society of Thermal and Fluids Engineers, an international non-profit organization focused on research and engineering in these and related fields [16].

References

    1. Y. Bayazitoglu et al., “Professor Yogesh Jaluria on his 60th Birthday,” Int. J. Heat Mass Transfer, 52, 5283-84, 2009.

    2. Board of Governors Professor, http://urwebsrv.rutgers.edu/focus/article/legacy%20link/822.

    3. Y. Jaluria, Y., Natural Convection Heat and Mass Transfer, Pergamon Press, U.K., 1980. Also, translated into Russian, Mir Publishers, Moscow, 1983.

    4. B. Gebhart, Y. Jaluria, R.L. Mahajan, and B. Sammakia, Buoyancy-Induced Flows and Transport, Hemisphere Publishing Company, Washington, DC, 1988 (CRC Press, Boca Raton, FL). Reference (Hardbound) and Textbook (Paperback) editions. Also, translated into Russian, Mir Publishers, Moscow, 1991.

    5. P. Craig, “The Science of Glass,” Access, NCSA, 13 (2), 24-27, 2000. http://access.ncsa.illinois.edu/Stories/Optics/optic1.html.[]

    6. Y. Jaluria, Design and Optimization of Thermal Systems, McGraw-Hill, New York, 1998. 2nd Ed., CRC Press, Boca Raton, FL, 2008.

    7. Jaluria, Y. and Cooper, L. Y. "Negatively Buoyant Wall Flows Generated in Enclosure Fires," Prog. Energy Combust. Sci. Vol. 15, pp. 159-182, 1989.

    8. Max Jakob Memorial Award, http://soe.rutgers.edu/~jaluria/ASME%20Heat%20Transfer%20Division%20-%20Max%20Jakob%20Memorial%20Award.htm.[]

    9. ASME Freeman Scholar Award, http://soe.rutgers.edu/~jaluria/Freeman.html.[]

    10. ASME Worcester Reed Warner Medal, http://soe.rutgers.edu/~jaluria/worcester.html.[]

    11. Heat Transfer Memorial Award, https://www.asme.org/about-asme/get-involved/honors-awards/achievement-awards/heat-transfer-memorial-award.[]

    12. 2003 Richard Henry Thurston Lecture Award, http://soe.rutgers.edu/~jaluria/thurston2003.pdf.[]

    13. Yogesh Jaluria, 2012 Honorary Membership, https://www.asme.org/engineering-topics/media/applied-mechanics/video-yogesh-jaluria-2012-honorary-membership.[]

    14. Y. Jaluria, “Editorial,” ASME J. Heat Transfer, 127 (8), 797, 2005. Also, “Editor’s Farewell Note,” ASME J. Heat Transfer, 132 (10), 100201, 2010.

    15. J.F. Klausner, “In Appreciation,” ASME J. Heat Transfer, 133 (9), 090401, 2011.

    16. American Society of Thermal and Fluids Engineers, http://www.astfe.org/board.

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