G. Wayne Clough

G. Wayne Clough

G. Wayne Clough

Secretary Emeritus, Smithsonian Institution
President Emeritus

Gerald Wayne Clough is President Emeritus of the Georgia Institute of Technology (Georgia Tech) and former Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution. A graduate of Georgia Tech in civil engineering, he was the first alumnus to serve as President of the Institute. 

The Clough Undergraduate Learning Commons, which officially opened its doors in August 2011, is named in his honor. Clough has garnered many other awards and honors, including the title of President Emeritus, two Norman Medals, eight honorary degrees, and membership in the National Science Board.

After earning his doctorate, Clough began his academic career as an assistant professor at Duke University in 1969. He joined the faculty at Stanford University in 1974 first as an associate professor and then later as full professor. In 1982, he joined the faculty of Virginia Tech as a professor of civil engineering and served as head of their Department of Civil Engineering for seven years. In 1990, Clough became dean of the Virginia Tech College of Engineering. Clough continued his research and instruction of graduate students at Virginia Tech in addition to his administrative responsibilities. Clough's research focused on geotechnical engineering, including earthquake studies, numerical analysis, soil structure interaction, in-situ testing, and underground openings. In 1993, he became provost and vice president for academic affairs at the University of Washington. Clough cofounded the United States Universities Council of Geotechnical Engineering Research (USUCGER), and served as the organization's first president during 1993.

wayne.clough@ce.gatech.edu

(404) 385-2755

Website

University, College, and School/Department
Research Focus Areas:
  • Social & Environmental Impacts
  • Additional Research:
    Climate/Environment

    IRI Connections:

    William Drummond

    William  Drummond

    William Drummond

    Associate Professor
    MS-GIST Program Director, Associate Director, Center for Geographic Information Systems

    bill.drummond@coa.gatech.edu

    (404) 894-2350

    Website

    Research Focus Areas:
  • Policy & Economics
  • Social & Environmental Impacts
  • Additional Research:
    City and Regional Planning; Climate/Environment

    IRI Connections:

    Russell Gentry

    Russell Gentry

    Russell Gentry

    Professor, College of Design
    Associate Dean for Faculty, College of Design
    Acting Director, Digital Building Lab

    Russell Gentry is professor of architecture and civil engineering (by courtesy) and a licensed structural engineer. He teaches graduate courses in building structures, computationally-driven fabrication and construction, and building integration. He is affiliated with the design computing faculty in the School of Architecture and the structural engineering and mechanics of materials faculty in the School of Civil Engineering. 

    Gentry is the chair of ASTM D30.10, Composites for Civil Structures and an expert on the development of test methods for composite materials. He is a fellow of the International Institute for Fiber Composites (IIFC). He is the Georgia Tech principal investigator on the NSF-sponsored international initiative to develop alternative uses for decommissioned composite wind turbine blades. 

    Gentry is the acting director of the Digital Building Laboratory (DBL), an applied research lab in the College of Design, focusing on computational design, building information modeling, and information technology in the AEC industry. He serves as the associate dean for faculty in the College of Design.

    russell.gentry@coa.gatech.edu

    (404) 894-3845

    Website

    Research Focus Areas:
  • Energy Utilization and Conservation
  • Additional Research:
    Building Technologies

    IRI Connections:

    A.P. "Sakis" Meliopoulos

    A.P. "Sakis" Meliopoulos

    A.P. "Sakis" Meliopoulos

    Associate Director, Cyber-Physical Systems

    A.P. "Sakis" Meliopoulos, Ph.D., is the Georgia Power Distinguished Professor in the School of Electrical & Computer Engineering at Georgia Tech and serves as Associate Director of Cyber-Physical Systems for the Institute for Information Security & Privacy. Meliopoulos helped the development of the power program at Georgia Tech by contributing to the modernization of existing courses, introducing new courses, initiating research activities, and developing continuing education programs and the Power System Certificate program. Meliopoulos is the co-inventor, with George Cokkinides, of the Smart Ground Multimeter and the Macrodyne PMU-based Harmonic Measurement System for transmission networks. In his most recent research activities, he has introduced new approaches for modeling large scale power grids based on quadratization and the utilization of this approach to a variety of protection and control of the future power system integrated with distributed generation, renewable energy sources, and power electronic subsystems and interfaces. He has introduced the concept of the SuperCalibrator, a new approach that enables fully distributed state estimation and root cause disturbance analysis. This technology is expected to make a huge impact on the way we presently monitor and control the power grid. Presently, Meliopoulos leads four field demonstration projects on four different utilities: USVI-WAPA, NYPA, Southern Company, and PG&E. He has applied the quadratized approach for high fidelity analysis, stability and control of integrated systems consisting of the power grid, and power electronics interfaced distributed generation and renewables (the μGRID model). He is leading an EPRI-sponsored effort to develop "settingless" protection methods utilizing recent technologies of merging units and GPS-synchronized measurements. He has developed a state-of-the-art synchrophasor laboratory with multiple capabilities: (a) characterization of PMUs, (b) testing of PDCs, (c) autonomous monitoring and control using GPS-synchronized measurements, and (d) testing of protective functions that require GPS synchronization. Meliopoulos holds three patents, published three books, and published over 270 technical papers. For his research achievements, he was elected Fellow of the IEEE in 1993. In addition, he has received the IEEE-IAS Society Field Award in 2005 (IEEE-IAS Richard Kaufman Award), and the 2010 George Montefiore Institute Award (Belgium). He was named the Georgia Power Distinguished Professor in 2006. He serves as the site director for the NSF I/URC PSERC, he is the academic administrator of the Power System Certificate program, and the chairman of the Georgia Tech Protective Relaying Conference and the Fault and Disturbance Analysis Conference. He attended the National Technical University of Athens, Greece, where he earned the Diploma in Electrical and Mechanical Engineering in 1972. He then attended Georgia Tech where he earned his MSEE (1974) and Ph.D. (1976) degrees. He joined Georgia Tech's faculty of Electrical Engineering in 1976.

    sakis.m@gatech.edu

    404.894.2926

    Office Location:
    VL E164

    Website

    Research Focus Areas:
  • Cyber-Physical Systems
  • Energy Generation, Storage, and Distribution
  • Additional Research:
    Large-Scale or Distributed Systems

    IRI Connections:

    Ajeet Rohatgi

    Ajeet Rohatgi

    Ajeet Rohatgi

    Regents Professor, School of Electrical and Computer Engineering
    John H. Weitnauer, Jr. Chair, College of Engineering
    Georgia Research Alliance Eminent Scholar

    Ajeet Rohatgi received the B.S. (E.E.) degree from Indian Institute of Technology in 1971, the M.S. (Materials Engineering) from Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University in 1973, and the Ph.D. in Metallurgy and Materials Science from Lehigh University in 1977. He joined the Westinghouse Research and Development Center in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in 1977 and became a Westinghouse Fellow while working on the science and technology of photovoltaic and microelectronic devices. Rohatgi joined the ECE faculty at Georgia Tech in 1985 and started a program on photovoltaics, which has become one of the best in the country. He has become an internationally recognized leader in photovoltaics. He is the founding director of the first university-based DOE Center of Excellence in Photovoltaic Research and Education. He is the author of more than 300 publications and holds 10 U.S. patents. Rohatgi has received numerous awards and distinctions from professional societies and Georgia Tech. He is the founder and CTO for Suniva.

    ajeet.rohatgi@ece.gatech.edu

    404.894.7692

    Office Location:
    VL W121

    ECE Profile Page

  • University Center of Excellence for Photovoltaics
  • Google Scholar

    Research Focus Areas:
  • Electronic Materials
  • Materials for Energy
  • Renewable Energy
  • Semiconductors
  • Additional Research:
    silicon devices; solar cells; dielectrics; Compund Semiconductors; solar energy

    IRI Connections:

    Dong Qin

    Dong Qin

    Dong Qin

    Professor, School of Materials Science and Engineering and School of Chemistry and Biochemistry

    Dong Qin is Professor in the School of Materials Science and Engineering, with an adjunct appointment in the School of Chemistry and Biochemistry, at the Georgia Institute of Technology (GT). Her academic records include a B.S. in Chemistry from Fudan University, a Ph.D. in Physical Chemistry with Professor Hai-Lung Dai from University of Pennsylvania, a postdoctoral stint with Professor George M. Whitesides at Harvard University, and an MBA from the University of Washington. Qin is a recipient of the GT-Class of 1940 W. Roane Beard Outstanding Teacher Award (2020), GT-Provost Teaching and Learning Fellow Award (2018), GT-Geoffrey G. Eichholz Faculty Teaching Award (2018), 3M Non-Tenured Faculty Award (2015), and GT-CETL/BP Junior Faculty Teaching Excellence Award (2015).

    Qin has pioneered a set of in situ techniques for the characterization of atomic/molecular events on the surface of noble-metal nanocrystals in a liquid phase and under operando conditions. In one example, she established the use of surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) in probing the heterogeneous nucleation and growth of colloidal nanocrystals, as well as catalytic reactions on the surface of designer nanocrystals. Qin is also widely recognized for her many original contributions to the rational synthesis of metal nanocrystals with novel properties. Qin has co-authored 80 scientific papers in peer-reviewed journals, with an h-index of 39. Among them, she is the corresponding author of 33 papers since she started at GT in 2012. Qin is an Associate Editor of Nanoscale (with an impact factor of 7.79), Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC), and also serves on the advisory boards of Journal of Materials Chemistry C and Nanoscale Horizon, RSC. In 2021, Qin was elected a Fellow of Royal Society of Chemistry (FRSC). Founded in 1841, RSC is the largest organization in Europe for advancing the chemical sciences.

    dong.qin@mse.gatech.edu

    404.385.2182

    Office Location:
    MoSE 3100N

    MSE Profile Page

  • Qin Lab
  • Google Scholar

    Research Focus Areas:
  • Materials and Nanotechnology
  • Additional Research:
    Plasmonics; shape-controlled nanocrystals; Catalysis; in situ characterization; Advanced Characterization; Soft lithography

    IRI Connections:

    Gleb Yushin

    Gleb Yushin

    Gleb Yushin

    Professor, School of Materials Science and Engineering

    Gleb Yushin is a Professor at the School of Materials Science and Engineering at Georgia Institute of Technology and a Co-Founder of several companies, including Sila Nanotechnologies, Inc.. For his contributions to materials science, Yushin has received numerous awards and recognitions, including Kavli Fellow Award, R&D 100 Award (Y-Carbon's application), Honda Initiation Grant Award, National Science Foundation CAREER Award, Air Force Office of Scientific Research Young Investigator Award, and several distinctions from National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), such as Nano 50 Award. Dr. Yushin has co-authored over 30 patents and patent applications, over 100 invited presentations and seminars and over 100 publications on nanostructured Electronic Materials related applications, including papers in Science, Nature Materials and other leading journals. His current research is focused on advancing energy storage materials and devices for electronics, transportation and grid applications.

    gleb.yushin@mse.gatech.edu

    404.385.3261

    Office Location:
    Love 371

    YUSHIN GROUP

  • MSE Profile Page
  • Google Scholar

    Research Focus Areas:
  • Energy
  • Energy Generation, Storage, and Distribution
  • Energy Storage
  • Materials & Manufacturing
  • Materials and Nanotechnology
  • Materials for Energy
  • Miniaturization & Integration
  • Nanomaterials
  • Additional Research:
    CharacterizationMeasurementsPhotovoltaicsPolymersProcessing, Fabrication, & ManufacturingSynthesis

    IRI Connections:

    Mark Styczynski

    Mark Styczynski

    Mark Styczynski

    Professor

    Mark Styczynski is an Associate Professor in the School of Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering at the Georgia Institute of Technology (Georgia Tech), doing research at the interface of synthetic and systems biology as applied to metabolic systems. His synthetic biology work focuses on the development of low-cost, minimal-equipment biosensors for the diagnosis of nutritional deficiencies in the developing world. His systems biology work uses computational and experimental methods to characterize metabolic dynamics and regulation using metabolomics data. He has received young investigator awards from the NSF, DARPA, and ORAU. He has won multiple department-and institute-level teaching awards at Georgia Tech. He founded and was the first president of the Metabolomics Association of North America (MANA), and is a Council Member in the Engineering BiologyResearch Consortium.

    mark.styczynski@chbe.gatech.edu

    404-894-2825

    Office Location:
    EBB 4013

    Website

  • Related Site
  • Google Scholar

    Research Focus Areas:
  • Cancer Biology
  • Chemical Biology
  • Drug Design, Development and Delivery
  • Regenerative Medicine
  • Renewable Energy
  • Systems Biology
  • Additional Research:
    Modelling and controlling metabolic dynamics and regulation (metabolic engineering). Biofuels. Systems biology-based experimental and bioinformatics analysis of metabolism Synthetic biology for the development of biosensors and diagnostics The main focus of theStyczynski groupis the experimental and computational study of the dynamics and regulation of metabolism, with ultIMaTe applications in metabolic engineering, biotechnology, and biosensors/diagnostics.

    IRI Connections:

    Constance Crozier

    Constance Crozier

    Constance Crozier

    Assistant Professor

    I am an Assistant Professor at Georgia Tech ISyE. My research concerns the control and operation of decarbonized power systems, particularly with the integration of flexible loads such as electric vehicles. I got my Ph.D. from the University of Oxford in the Energy and Power Group, and completed my postdoc in the GRIFFIN Lab at CU Boulder.

    constance.crozier@isye.gatech.edu

    Constance Crozier School Webpage

    Research Focus Areas:
  • Electric Vehicles
  • Additional Research:
    Power systems and Electric vehicles

    IRI Connections: