For release October 5, 2006
UTSI PROF. JOE MAJDALANI ELECTED AS ASME FELLOW
Dr. Joseph Majdalani, a professor at The University of
Tennessee Space Institute, has been elected as a Fellow of the
American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME).
“I am very pleased for, and very proud of, Dr. Majdalani,” said
Dr. Donald C. Daniel, UT associate vice president and chief
operating officer of the Space Institute.
“Being elected a Fellow of one’s technical society is extremely
difficult, and it is an honor that is given to only a select
few. My expectation at UTSI is for all full professors to
achieve this distinction, and I am delighted that Joe is leading
the way.”
The Fellow grade of membership recognizes exceptional
engineering achievements and contributions to the engineering
profession and recipients must be recommended for the honor.
Majdalani was recommended by Dr. George Garrison, a long-time
UTSI professor who recently retired, and himself an ASME Fellow.
He cited among Majdalani’s specific achievements his
“significant contributions in the mathematical modeling of
injection and swirl-driven combustion chambers.”
“I’m glad that Dr. Majdalani was selected,” Garrison said. “I
thought that he had excellent credentials for this award.”
Majdalani expressed his deep gratitude to Drs. Daniel and
Garrison and to Administrative Specialist Gail Wells, saying
that “without Dr. Daniel’s encouragement, I would never have
thought of applying for this honor.”
The new Fellow is known for his work on acoustic instability
theory in solid rocket motors and vortex engine technology in
both liquid and hybrid rocket applications. He presently serves
on the External Advisory Board of the Center for Simulation of
Advanced Rockets, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, and
has been named an “American Institute of Aeronautics and
Astronautics (AIAA) Technical Expert in Analytical Approaches to
Hybrid Rocket Propulsion.”
Majdalani’s work on wave propagation has resulted in the
development of a generalized-scaling technique in perturbation
theory that has appeared in the Proceedings of the Royal
Society. His work on core flow modeling of liquid, solid, and
hybrid rocket engines has led to the discovery of new solutions
to describe cyclonic motions in liquid and hybrid rocket
engines, and advanced injection-driven flow fields in simulated
solid rocket motors. Recently, his work on compressible gas
motions has led to the development of a unique methodology that
can be used as a substitute for numerical simulations in
obtaining multi-dimensional analytical solutions to high speed
flow problems.
Majdalani received the 1998-99 College of Engineering Research
Award in addition to the 1998-99 and 1999-2000 Outstanding
Teaching Awards from Marquette University. He also received
NASA’s 2002-03 and 2003-04 Faculty Research Infrastructure
Awards, the 2002-03 Higher Education Incentive Award and, from
the National Science Foundation, the prestigious CAREER Award in
2003.
Before joining UTSI’s Mechanical, Aerospace, and Biomedical
Engineering faculty at UTSI in September 2003, Majdalani was on
the tenured faculty of Marquette University. He earned his M.S.
degree in 1991 and his Ph.D. in 1995 – both in Mechanical
Engineering – from the University of Utah and proceeded to
accumulate a distinguished teaching, research and service
record. Dr. Majdalani resides in Tullahoma with his wife Inna
and their son George.
His technical expertise centers primarily on propulsion, fluid
mechanics, heat transfer, and thermodynamics. He has consulted
for a variety of companies and organizations including Orbital
Technologies, Packard, Packard and Johnson, Sarcos, Ram
Products, Snap-On Tools, Software and Engineering Associates,
and S.C. Johnson Professional.
In July, Majdalani attended the 42nd AIAA/ASME/SAE/ASEE Joint
Propulsion Conference and Exhibit in Sacramento, Calif. At the
meeting, he presented three scientific papers, a one-hour oral
presentation on the modeling and simulation of swirling flows,
and two invited talks covering analytical and numerical models
of hybrid rocket flow fields. His presentations were well
received by a packed audience. (Dr. Kenneth Harwell of
Tullahoma, former UTSI dean and recently with the Air Force
Office of Scientific Research, said Majdalani’s oral
presentation “described some very excellent work that I think
contributed greatly to the knowledge in this field” and should
be “of great interest to Department of Defense engineers and
scientists.”)
The three papers presented were titled “Stability of the Taylor-Culick
Profile with Headwall Injection and Particle Interactions,”
“Characterization of the Tangential Boundary Layers in the
Bidirectional Vortex Thrust Chamber,” and “The Compressible
Taylor Flow in Slab Rocket Motors.”

Dr. Donald C. Daniel
congratulates Dr. Joseph Majdalani, right, on
being elected a Fellow of the American Society
of Mechanical Engineers.
- UTSI photo by Scott Van
Zandbergen
Writer: Weldon Payne (931)
393-7222
wpayne@utsi.edu
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