Particle Technology Concentration at NJIT: An NSF-CRCD Program

Authors

  • Rajesh N. Dave New Jersey Institute of Technology
  • Ian S. Fischer New Jersey Institute of Technology
  • Jonathan Luke New Jersey Institute of Technology
  • Robert Pfeffer New Jersey Institute of Technology
  • Anthony D. Rosato New Jersey Institute of Technology

Abstract

Part of a special section on Particle Science and Technology.

No abstract available.

Author Biographies

Rajesh N. Dave, New Jersey Institute of Technology

Rajesh N. Dave is Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering, Associate Director of the Particle Technology Center, and co-directs a joint New Jersey Center of R&D Excellence in Particle Processing Research. His research interests include pattern recognition (clustering, fuzzy sets, image processing) and particle technology (experiments and simulations of granular flows, dry particle coating, hopper flows).

Ian S. Fischer, New Jersey Institute of Technology

Ian S. Fischer is Associate Professor and conducts research in the kinematics of mechanisms. He is also involved with the development of a non-intrusive particle-tracking technique, revision of the undergraduate dynamics of machinery course, and the graduate-level spatial mechanisms course.

Jonathan Luke, New Jersey Institute of Technology

Jonathan Luke is Associate Professor of Mathematics at New Jersey Institute of Technology. His research specialty is the analysis of sedimentation speeds in suspensions. He has developed graduate courses in mathematical modeling and in the mathematics of particle technology.

Robert Pfeffer, New Jersey Institute of Technology

Robert Pfeffer is Distinguished Professor of Chemical Engineering at NJIT. His research interests include the flow of gas-particle suspensions, granular and fibrous bed filtration, sintering, agglomeration, dry particle coating, and granulation.

Anthony D. Rosato, New Jersey Institute of Technology

Anthony D, Rosato is Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering at NJIT and is director of the Particle Technology Center. His research interests are in computer-simulated modeling and experiments on rapid flows of granular materials and in curriculum development in particle technology.

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Published

1998-04-01

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