Mohammad E. Taslim

Professor,  Mechanical and Industrial Engineering
Program Director,  Master of Science in Energy Systems

Contact

Office

  • 371 SN
  • 617.373.5514

Lab

  • 165 EC
  • 617.373.2081

Research Focus

Experimental and numerical research in gas turbine cooling technology, solar and wind energy, non-newtonian liquid droplet interactions with hydrophobic surfaces, nano-sensors

Education

  • PhD, University of Arizona, 1981

Honors & Awards

  • 2022 Faculty Research Team Award
  • Fellow, American Society of Mechanical Engineers
  • Associate Fellow, American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics
  • Member, IGTI Heat Transfer Committee

Research Overview

Experimental and numerical research in gas turbine cooling technology, solar and wind energy, non-newtonian liquid droplet interactions with hydrophobic surfaces, nano-sensors

Selected Research Projects

  • Experimental and Numerical Heat Transfer Related to the Cooling of Gas Turbine Hot Sections
    • – Principal Investigator, General Electric Aviation
  • Experimental/Numerical Study of Droplet Impact of Newtonian as Well as Non-Newtonian Fluids on Super Hydrophobic Surfaces
    • – Co-Principal Investigator, American Chemical Society
  • Rheological Characterization of Airborne Droplets of Petro-Hydrocarbon Liquids using Ultrasonic Resonance
    • – Co-Principal Investigator, American Chemical Society

Selected Publications

  • Fang, Zilong, Huang, Xiao, Taslim, Mohammad E., Wan, Kai-tak (2021). Flexural bending resonance of acoustically levitated glycerol droplet. Physics of Fluids, 33(7). 10.1063/5.0055710
  • Balaji, Sainathkaushik, Yang, Fan, Taslim, Mohammad E. (2021). A comperative experimental study between the film effectiveness of trench and diffusion film holes. International Journal of Thermal Sciences, 161,106713. 10.1016/J.IJTHERMALSCI.2020.106713
  • F. Xue, M.E. Taslim, Detailed Flow Analyses through Crossover Holes Between Two Adjacent Rib-Roughened Cooling Channels and the Resulting Impingement Heat Transfer, Journal of Turbomachinery, 141(5), 2019, 051003-1-9
  • F. Xue, M.E. Taslim, Flow and Heat Transfer in a Rib-Roughened Trailing- Edge Cooling Channel with Crossover Impingement, International Journal of Gas Turbine, Propulsion and Power Systems, 10(1), 2019, 1-11
  • Z. Borzooeian, M.E. Taslim, O. Ghasemi, S. Rezvani, G. Borzooeian, A High Precision Length-Based Carbon Nanotube Ladder, RSC Advances, 8, 2018, 36049–36055
  • Z. Borzooeian, M.E. Taslim, O. Ghasemi, S. Rezvani, G. Borzooeian, A. Nourbakhsh, A High Precision Method for Length-Based Separation of Carbon Nanotubes Using Bio-Conjugation, SDS-PAGE and Silver Staining, PLOS one Journal, 13(6), 2018
  • X. Huang, K.T. Wan, M.E. Taslim, Axisymmetric Rim Instability of Water Droplet Impact on a Super-Hydrophobic Surface, Physics of Fluids, 30, 2018, 094101

Undergraduate

May 08, 2024

2024 URF Scholars Recipients

Several engineering students received 2024 URF Scholars Awards from Northeastern’s Office of Undergraduate Research and Fellowships. URF Scholars are students who are graduating this year and who have earned a PEAK Experiences Award, applied for a distinguished fellowship, or participated in graduate school advising.

Faculty

Mar 18, 2024

$4.8M ARL Award for Advancing Wire-Arc Direct Energy Deposition for Large-Format Metal Additive Manufacturing

Sinan Müftü, MIE Distinguished Professor, and Ozan Özdemir, MIE assistant professor, are leading a team that was awarded a $4.38 million grant from the Army Research Laboratory to advance wire-arc direct energy deposition for large-format metal additive manufacturing.

Faculty

Feb 09, 2024

Weighing Airline Passengers for Precise Estimates

MIE Professor Mohammad Taslim explains the benefits of weighing airline passengers in addition to their luggage before a flight.

Faculty

Nov 13, 2023

$1.5M ARL Grant To Improve Cybersecurity and Robustness in Additive Manufacturing

MIE Professor Sinan Müftü and Assistant Professor Ozan Özdemir were awarded a $1.5 million research grant by the Army Research Laboratories (ARL) to spearhead innovative initiatives in cybersecurity and enhancement of mechanical robustness in parts and coatings produced through Cold Spray Additive Manufacturing.

Faculty

Sep 20, 2022

Northeastern in Top 100 Universities With U.S. Utility Patents

For the seventh consecutive year, Northeastern University has appeared in the National Academy of Inventors (NAI) list of Top 100 Universities that were granted U.S. utility patents in 2021, cementing it as a world leader in academia and research.

Faculty

Apr 15, 2022

Faculty and Staff Awards 2022

Congratulations to all the winners of the faculty and staff awards, and to everyone for their hard work and dedication during the 2021-2022 academic school year.

Mo Taslim

Faculty

Aug 03, 2021

Determining the Lengths of a Collection of Carbon Nanotubes

MIE Professor Mohammad Taslim was awarded a patent for “Length-based carbon nanotube ladders.”

Anti-nodes of resonant waveform of typical glycerol droplets with arrows indicating the waveform amplitudes. In seesaw mode (m = 1), h = 0.923 mm, dp = 3.71 mm, and f * = 63 Hz. Pictures show t = 0, ¼ and ½ of the oscillating period. In saddleback mode (m = 2), h = 0.91 mm, dp = 3.48 mm, f * = 78 Hz, and D ≈ 1.17 × 10−7 N·m. Views from the side and an oblique meridional angle are shown. The dashed lines show the two orthogonal axes of C4 symmetry. In monkey saddle mode (m = 3), h = 0.63 mm, dp = 4.36 mm, f * = 105 Hz, and D ≈ 6.46 × 10−8 N·m with a C6 symmetry. Arrows show the alternating crests and valleys. The finite element simulation using ABAQUS is shown on the right, by which flexural rigidity is deduced. The color code shows out-of-plane displacement from the equatorial neutral plane.

Faculty

Jul 12, 2021

MIE Research Selected as Editor’s Choice of Physics of Fluids

A research paper, titled “Flexural Bending Resonance of Acoustically Levitated Glycerol Droplet” by Zilong Fang, PhD’22, mechanical engineering, and MIE Professors Kai-Tak Wan and Mohammad Taslim was selected as the Editor’s Choice and published in the journal of Physics of Fluids.

Sep 26, 2016

Taslim Receives Patent for Non-Rotating Wind Energy Generator

MIE Professor Mohammad Taslim was awarded a patent for his "Non-rotating Wind Energy Generator". Abstract Source: USPTO In an embodiment of the invention, a non-rotating wind energy generator uses the fluid flow principles of vortex shedding and transverse galloping to generate oscillatory motion of a beam, and alternators, optionally located near both ends of the […]

Jan 04, 2016

Fluid Flow Electrical Power

MIE Professor Mohammad Taslim has received a patent for creating a “Non-Rotating Wind Energy Generator”.

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