
UC Engineering Professor Honored With National ASME Award
Raj M. Manglik
, PhD, Professor of
in the
College of Engineering and Applied Science
, recently received the prestigious
American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) Heat Transfer Memorial Award
in the category of the art of heat transfer.
Manglik has been honored for pioneering and seminal advancement of the science and engineering of interfacial transport phenomena, boiling, thermal processing of non-Newtonian media, enhanced heat transfer, and micro-scale compact heat exchangers, leading to transformative contributions to the archival literature as well as engineering design practice.
Manglik currently serves as director of the UC Thermal-Fluids & Thermal Processing Laboratory. His research prowess spans a broad spectrum of thermal science and engineering, and he is a leading international expert on enhanced heat transfer, interfacial phenomena, molecular dynamics of surface-active self-assembled biomolecules and polymers, boiling heat transfer, bubble and droplet dynamics, thermal processing of polymeric materials and non-Newtonian fluids, energy and water conservation and compact heat exchangers.
Manglik graduated with his B.Tech. in mechanical engineering from the Indian Institute of TechnologyMadras. In 1984, he arrived in the U.S. to attend Iowa State University, where he obtained his MS in mechanical engineering. He later earned his PhD in mechanical engineering from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.
Dr. Manglik's award.
Manglik hails from a long academic line of heat transfer movers and innovators. Befittingly, his mentor, Arthur E. Bergles, NAE, was also awarded the ASME Heat Transfer Memorial Award in 1979. Bergles advisor, Warren M. Rohsenow, NAE, was one of the first to be honored with the award in 1967. Together, the two heat transfer pioneers created the
Bergles-Rohsenow Young Investigator Award in Heat Transfer
, which is given to a young engineer that is under 36 years of age and has received a PhD or equivalent degree in engineering. The individual must be committed to pursuing research in heat transfer and must have demonstrated the potential to make significant contributions to the field of heat transfer.
Manglik recalls learning from the pages of the groundbreaking book "Principles of Heat Transfer," by the renowned Frank Kreith, NAE, who is one of the 20th century fathers of heat transfer. Today, Manglik proudly co-authors the 7th and 8th editions of this classical textbook with Kreith (2011 7e, and 2016 8e, Cengage).
Dr. Manglik speaking at the award ceremony.
Additionally, Manglik is the editor-in-chief of the
Journal of Enhanced Heat Transfer
and has been its editor since the journals inception in 1993-94. He was a two-term associate editor of ASME Journal of
Heat Transfer
, editor of the
International Journal of Heat Exchangers
and technical editor of
Heat Transfer and Fluid Flow Data Books
. He has more than 250 archival papers and technical reports, and has given numerous plenary talks, keynote presentations and invited lectures at both national and international forums. He has published 12 highly acclaimed books, monographs and book chapters and the monograph: Plate Heat Exchangers: Design, Applications and Performance (2007, WIT Press, UK).
Manglik also has extensive industry experience as he, prior to his academic career in universities, garnered eight years of thermal-engineering expertise, in design of steam turbines, cogeneration power plants, heat exchangers and hydraulic and pneumatic actuators.
Manglik was the recipient of the very first CAREER Award (1995) from the National Science Foundation and has also received the ASME Heat Transfer Division 75th Anniversary Medal (2013) and the ASME Melville Medal (2006) for the best original scientific contribution, among many other research and teaching awards. He has served as the Chair of the ASME HTD K-10 committee (2013-16), member of K-2 committee (2011-15), Chair of the first HTD-FED Summer Conference (2004), Chair of ISHMT-ASME Heat and Mass Transfer Conference (2011), and is a current member of the HTD Executive Committee (2014-18). He is a Fellow of ASME, a senior member of AIChE, and member of ASHRAE, Sigma Xi, and Tau Beta Pi.
It is quite an honor for me to now be featured among the likes of my distinguished mentor and professional grandfather," he said.
Additional Contacts
Related Stories
Golden Reunion a perfect opportunity to contemplate, celebrate...
March 14, 2025
We’re all familiar with one of time’s odd characteristics: Something may have happened ages ago, but it can feel like only yesterday. Over many years, things change a lot, or maybe not at all. This feeling is occurring now within the newest members of the UC Alumni Association’s Golden Bearcats Society, which honors those who have reached the half-century mark as University of Cincinnati graduates.
Biomedical engineer studying blunt and blast brain injuries
March 11, 2025
Olga Liaudanskaya, assistant professor of biomedical engineering at the University of Cincinnati, always dreamed of being a scientist. After finishing her graduate degree in materials science and engineering in Italy, she came to the United States for her postdoctoral program, where her research focused on the brain. This led her to a faculty position at UC’s College of Engineering and Applied Science. Recently, she was awarded funding from the Department of Defense for a project on the molecular mechanisms triggered by blunt and blast brain injuries.
Revolutionary Redesign: Biomedical Engineering Student Enhances...
March 10, 2025
Biomedical student Aidan Saylor enhances USAF anthropometry tools, boosting precision and reliability for military readiness.