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For release December 12, 2006
DR. ATUL SHETH RETIRING AT SPACE INSTITUTE
AFTER 22 YEARS AS PROFESSOR, RESEARCHER
Dr. Atul C. Sheth of Tullahoma is ending a
22-year career as a professor of chemical engineering at The
University of Tennessee Space Institute.
Bringing with him an outstanding academic record that started in
high school and continued through his studies in college and at
two universities, Sheth joined UTSI on September 1, 1984, and
began teaching as an associate professor and member of the
Energy Conversion Program. He will retire Dec. 31 as an emeritus
professor.
Dr. Donald C. Daniel, UT associate vice president and chief
operating officer of UTSI, congratulated Sheth on his students,
research and patents during a reception held for the professor
at UTSI on Dec. 8.
Dr. George Garrison, retired professor and associate for most of
Sheth’s tenure, also commended him during the reception and
joined Daniel in presenting him gifts. Sheth assured the
gathering that he was not severing his ties with UTSI. Not only
will he continue his involvement in carbon fiber research, he
said, but he also has a student yet to complete graduate work.
Sheth was granted tenure in August 1988 and in July 1993 was
promoted to full professor.
Born in Bombay, India, Sheth graduated first in a class of 80
from the Modern High School. In 1958, he was ranked first among
300 graduates at Elphinstone College, where he had received the
Anil P. Desai prize. In 1964, he graduated with a bachelor’s
degree in Chemical Engineering from Bombay University’s
Department of Chemical Technology, ranking fifth out of 60
graduates. He began his studies there in 1960 when he received
the M.C. Ghia Scholarship.
Sheth flew to the United States in February 1967, spent two days
in Baltimore visiting a relative, then entered Northwestern
University in Evanston, Ill.
“I had eight dollars in my pocket and no winter protection when
I got there, and it was just a week after the famous ’67 snow
blizzard in Chicago,” Sheth says with a chuckle. His wife Sheila
had stayed with his parents in Bombay while he continued his
education.
The young student was accustomed to temperatures in the 60’s in
Bombay, and he had no place to stay in Evanston. After spending
a couple of nights in the YMCA, he found a rooming house with
rooms for $50 a month. He had a $1,500 grant for his college
expenses, but it was still in India. He advised the owner of the
house to contact the bank regarding the grant and eventually got
settled in.
In June 1973, Sheth graduated from Northwestern University with
a master’s and Ph.D. in Chemical Engineering. At Northwestern,
he was awarded the Murphee Fellowship. In Bombay, Sheth had done
private tutoring in calculus, and as a teaching assistant at
Northwestern, he taught fluid mechanics, thermal pollution, and
polymer chemistry.
During his years at UTSI, Dr. Sheth was engaged in various
research, including recently being on the carbon research team
led by Dr. Ahmad Vakili. Perhaps one of his most unusual
research projects was his research that led to his discovery of
a method of turning chicken litter into profits for poultry
farmers. His research, proving that steam gasification of
chicken manure creates energy in the form of methane and
hydrogen-rich gas, has potential benefit for farmers while also
offering a cheap and environmentally safe way of producing
power.
Sheth also has been active in recent years in cooperative
teaching ventures with other campuses including sharing “distant
education” courses with students at Tennessee Technological
University in Cookeville.
The professor has only been back to his native land twice; the
last time was in 1982. “You don’t look back,” he says. “There is
an ending to whatever you start.”
There also are beginnings. One awaits Dr. and Mrs. Sheth as they
move to Fairfield, Calif.. Their two daughters are Archana Sheth
and Roma, both graduates of Tullahoma High School and of UT
Knoxville. Roma, her husband Jeff McCaig (a graduate of UTSI and
UT Knoxville) and their son Kieran live in Pleasant Hill,
Calif., 30 miles from the Sheths’ new home. Archana lives in
Sandpoint, Idaho.
Since 2004, the Great Point Energy of Cambridge, Mass., is
carrying out related research and development activities at the
pilot plant scale to commercialize “Blue Gas” (synthetic natural
gas) production from coal, based on Sheth’s research in
catalytic coal gasifications.
Sheth has been on the Scientific Advisory Board since 2004 and
very much involved in seeing that his research can offer an
attractive and economically visible option to solve the nation’s
energy problem.
In California, Sheth will work as an adjunct faculty member with
the Chemical Engineering Department of the University of
California at Davis. He also is continuing to be involved with
the carbon fiber research at UTSI.
Avid travelers, the Sheths plan to visit Panama soon and
Antarctica in 2008.

Dr. Donald C. Daniel, left, and Dr.
George Garrison, second from right, join Dr. Atul and
his wife Sheila at a reception for the retiring
professor. The weathervane, among gifts for Sheth, was a
tribute to Sheth’s research in chicken litter.

Dr. Donald C. Daniel
presents Dr. Atul Sheth with a plaque at a
reception held for the retiring professor.
-- UTSI Photos by Laura Horton
Writer: Weldon Payne (931) 393-7222
wpayne@utsi.edu
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