Richard O. Buckius

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Richard O. Buckius (born 1950) is an American engineer and chief operating officer for the National Science Foundation.

Early life and education[]

Richard Otto Buckius, born 1950 in Sacramento, California. He was the third child of Orland Edwin Buckius and Holley Lynip Buckius. He later moved with his family to Stockton, California. He has two older siblings, his sister Barbara Holley Buckius Martinez and brother Orland Edwin Buckius Jr. aka Ted.

The majority of Buckius' early education was in Stockton, California except for a short period when his father took a position in Banning, California. Buckius graduated from Stagg High School (Stockton, California) in 1968 and attended University of California, Berkeley. He received his bachelor's degree in mechanical engineering in 1972, his master's degree in 1973, then his PhD in 1975. All his degrees were from U.C. Berkeley.

Career[]

Buckius is currently the chief operating officer for the National Science Foundation. Buckius became vice president for research for Purdue University in May 2008 after having served as assistant director of the NSF's Directorate of Engineering since 2005 and previously as director of the agency's Division of Chemical and Transport Systems. He was head of the University of Illinois' Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering from 1998 to 2004, the Richard W. Kritzer Professor from 1992 to 1997 and associate vice chancellor for research from 1988 to 1991.[1] He specializes in heat transfer. He co-wrote a textbook on thermodynamics in 1992.[2]

Selected publications[3][]

  • Moser, K. W., E. C. Kutter, J. G. Gerogiadis, R. O. Buckius, H. D. Morris and J. R. Torczynski, “Velocity Measurements in Pipes with Sudden Contractions and Expansions Using Magnetic Resonance Imaging,” Experiments in Fluids, 29, pp. 438–447, 2000.
  • Moser, K. W. J. G. Georgiadis, and R. O. Buckius, “On the Accuracy of EPI-Based Phase Contrast Velocimetry,” Magnetic Resonance Imaging, 18:9, pp. 1115–1123, 2000.
  • Tang, K., and R. O. Buckius, “A Statistical Model of Wave Scattering from Random Rough Surfaces,” International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer, 44, pp. 4059–4073, 2001.
  • Moser, K. W., J. G. Georgiadis, and R. O. Buckius, “On the Use of Optical Flow Methods with Spin-Tagging Magnetic Resonance Imaging,” Annals of Biomedical Engineering, 29, 1-9, 2001.
  • Holdych, D. J., J. G. Georgiadis and R. O. Buckius, “Migration of a van der Waals Bubble: Lattice Boltzmann Formulation,” Physics of Fluids, 13:4, 817-825, 2001.
  • Kawka, P. A. and R. O. Buckius, “Optical Properties of Polyimide Films in the Infrared,” International Journal of Thermophysics, 22:2, pp. 517–534, 2002.
  • Holdych, D. J., D. R. Noble, J. G. Georgiadis, and R. O. Buckius, “Truncation Error Analysis of Lattice Boltzmann Methods,” J. of Computational Physics, 193, 595-619, 2004.
  • Holdych, D. J., J. G. Georgiadis, and R. O. Buckius, “Hydrodynamic Instabilities of Near-Critical CO2 Flow in Micro-channels: Lattice Boltzmann Simulation,” Physics of Fluids, 16:5, 1791–1802, 2004.
  • He, J, W.-L. Cheng, and R. O. Buckius, “Wide Band Cumulative Absorption Coefficient Distribution Model for Overlapping Absorption in H2O and CO2 Mixtures,” International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer, 51, 1115–1129, 2008.
  • He, J, and R. O. Buckius, “Improved Band Parameters for a Simplified Wide Band Cumulative Absorption Coefficient Distribution Model for H2O and CO2,” International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer, 51, 1467–1474, 2008.

References[]

  1. ^ Purdue Marketing & Media, Purdue University. "Purdue News - Purdue's Buckius taking post at NSF". purdue.edu. Retrieved 26 April 2015.
  2. ^ "Fundamentals of Engineering Thermodynamics". google.com. Retrieved 26 April 2015.
  3. ^ "Our People - Purdue Engineering". purdue.edu. Retrieved 26 April 2015.

External links[]

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