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UCLA Engineering
Dean Vijay K. Dhir Elected to the Prestigious National Academy
of Engineering
Vijay
K. Dhir, dean of the UCLA Henry Samueli School of Engineering
and Applied Science, has been elected into the National Academy
of Engineering (NAE), the highest professional honor accorded
to an American engineer.
Academy membership honors those who have made
outstanding contributions to engineering research, practice, or
education. Established in 1964, the NAE shares responsibility
with the National Academy of Sciences to advise the federal government
on questions of policy in science and technology.
Honored for his work on boiling heat transfer
and nuclear reactor thermal hydraulics and safety, Dhir is among
76 new members and nine foreign associates elected to NAE membership,
which brings the total U.S. membership to 2,216 and the number
of foreign associates to 186.
“I am humbled and thrilled to be included
in such incredible company,” Dhir said. “But I feel
the most immediate importance of my election into the NAE is the
recognition it brings to UCLA Engineering and the School’s
truly outstanding faculty, students, and programs.”
Dhir was named dean of the UCLA Henry Samueli
School of Engineering and Applied Science in March 2003. Ranked
among the top 10 engineering schools among public universities
nationwide, the School is home to six multimillion-dollar interdisciplinary
research centers in space exploration, wireless sensor systems,
nanotechnology, nanomanufacturing, and nanoelectronics, all funded
by federal and private agencies. With Dhir’s election, UCLA
Engineering now has 22 NAE faculty members.
Dhir has been a faculty member at UCLA since 1974,
and leads the Boiling Heat Transfer Lab, which conducts pioneering
work in fundamental and applied research in phase change heat
transfer.A central concern of Dhir’s
program has been to understand boiling – one of the most
complex processes providing an efficient means of cooling. Dhir
has worked to design cooling systems for spacecraft as well as
for systems on earth. His experiments, conducted aboard NASA’s
KC-135 parabolic aircraft, uncovered a brand new aspect of the
physics of boiling that has led to better understanding of boiling
in microgravity.
His current research focuses on developing a flight
experiment to be conducted on the space station. His other research
includes post critical heat transfer in nuclear reactors and steam
generator tube vibrations under two phase flow conditions.
In addition to his many research achievements, Dhir has contributed
to publicservice and education as a creator of innovative new
outreach initiatives to high school students to encourage careers
in science and engineering.
In 2004, Dhir was named the recipient of the prestigious
Max Jakob Memorial Award. Bestowed annually to recognize eminent
achievement and distinguished service in the area of heat transfer,
the award was established by the American Society of Mechanical
Engineers and the American Society of Chemical Engineers to honor
Max Jakob, a pioneer in the science of heat transfer.
He has received the American Society of Mechanical
Engineers (ASME) Heat Transfer Memorial Award in the Science category,
the Donald Q. Kern award from the American Institute of Chemical
Engineers, and the Technical Achievement Award from the Thermal
Hydraulic Division of the American Nuclear Society. Dhir is a
fellow of ASME and the American Nuclear Society, and was inducted
into the University of Kentucky's College of Engineering Hall
of Distinction in 2004. He was the senior technical editor for
the American Society of Mechanical Engineers' Journal of Heat
Transfer from 2000 to 2005.
Born in India, Dhir received his Bachelor of Science
degree from Punjab Engineering College in Chandigarh, India, and
his Master of Technology degree from the Indian Institute of Technology
in Kanpur, India. He came to the United States in 1969 to continue
his studies in mechanical engineering, receiving his Ph.D. from
the University of Kentucky in 1972.
The mission of NAE is to promote the technological
welfare of the nation by gathering the knowledge and insights
of eminent members of the engineering profession. The NAE is the
portal for all engineering activities at the National Academies,
which along with the NAE, include the National Academy of Sciences,
the Institute of Medicine, and the National Research Council.
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