John Richard ThomeJohn R. Thome is Professor of Heat and Mass Transfer at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne (EPFL), Switzerland since 1998, where his primary interests of research are two-phase flow and heat transfer, covering both macro-scale and micro-scale heat transfer and enhanced heat transfer. He directs the Laboratory of Heat and Mass Transfer (LTCM) at the EPFL with a research staff of about 18-20 and is also Director of the Doctoral School in Energy. He received his Ph.D. at Oxford University, England in 1978. He is the author of four books: Enhanced Boiling Heat Transfer (1990), Convective Boiling and Condensation, 3rd Edition (1994), Wolverine Engineering Databook III (2004) and Nucleate Boiling on Micro-Structured Surfaces (2008). He received the ASME Heat Transfer Division's Best Paper Award in 1998 for a 3-part paper on two-phase flow and flow boiling heat transfer published in the Journal of Heat Transfer. He has received the J&E Hall Gold Medal from the U.K. Institute of Refrigeration in February, 2008 for his extensive research contributions on refrigeration heat transfer and more recently the 2010 ASME Heat Transfer Memorial Award. He has published widely on the fundamental aspects of microscale and macroscale two-phase flow and heat transfer and on enhanced boiling and condensation heat transfer.
Mohammad RahiminejadMohammad Rahiminejad is a third-year Ph.D. student in the doctoral program of Mechanics at EPFL. His main research centers on building physics and examines how the thermo-hydrodynamic behavior of airflow in a ventilated cavity behind traditional and modern (BIPV) external claddings impacts the thermal performance of the entire building envelope. To tackle this topic, he takes a multidisciplinary approach that encompasses numerical analyses, CFD simulations, and experimental measurements. Before joining EPFL, he worked as a project manager assistant in Shiraz, Iran, on quite a few industrial projects including the design of the ventilation systems of Tehran-Shomal Freeway, design of the air conditioning systems of Shiraz subway, and design of the air exhaust and jet fan systems of the Shiraz longest underpass. He holds a master’s degree in Mechanical Engineering from the Sharif University of Technology, Iran, where he investigated water purification through monolayer graphene membranes using Molecular Dynamics (MD) simulation. In his bachelor's degree in Shiraz University, he successfully achieved publishing a journal paper in the field of biomechanics that addressed the distribution of the pressure and velocity fields in the human upper airway during sneezing using CFD simulations.
Thomas KellerEDUCATION
1992 Dr. sc. techn. (PhD)
Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Zurich (ETH)
1983 Dipl. Bauing. ETH (MS civil engineering)
Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Zurich (ETH)
EMPLOYMENT
2007-present, Full Professor of Structural Engineering (100%)
Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Lausanne (EPFL)
Civil Engineering Institute
1998-2007, Associate Professor of Structural Engineering (80/100%)
Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Lausanne (EPFL)
Structural Engineering Institute
Foundation of CCLab in 2000
1996-1998, Assistant Professor of Structural Engineering (50%)
Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Zurich (ETH)
Department of Architecture
1992-2004, Senior Project Engineer and Joint Owner
Engineering offices in Zug and Zurich
1990-1992, Research Scientist
Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Zurich (ETH)
Structural Engineering Institute
1986-1990, Project Engineer
Architecture and engineering office Calatrava, Zurich
1983-1986, Teaching and Research Assistant
Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Zurich (ETH)
Structural Engineering Institute