화학공학소재연구정보센터
International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer, Vol.51, No.19-20, 4599-4613, 2008
Frontiers in transport phenomena research and education: Energy systems, biological systems, security, information technology and nanotechnology
A US National Science Foundation-sponsored workshop entitled "Frontiers in Transport Phenomena Research and Education: Energy Systems, Biological Systems, Security, Information Technology, and Nanotechnology" was held in May of 2007 at the University of Connecticut. The workshop provided a venue for researchers, educators and policy-makers to identify frontier challenges and associated opportunities in heat and mass transfer. Approximately 300 invited participants from academia, business and government from the US and abroad attended. Based upon the final recommendations oil the topical matter of the workshop, several trends become apparent. A strong interest in sustainable energy is evident. A continued need to understand the coupling between broad length (and time) scales persists, but the emerging need to better understand transport phenomena at the macro/mega scale has evolved. The need to develop new metrology techniques to collect and archive reliable property data persists. Societal sustainability received major attention in two of the reports. Matters involving innovation, entrepreneurship, and globalization of the engineering profession have emerged, and the responsibility to improve the technical literacy of the public-at-large is discussed. Integration of research thrusts and education activities is highlighted throughout. Specific recommendations, made by the panelists with input front the international heat transfer community and directed to the National Science Foundation, are included in several reports. (c) 2008 Published by Elsevier Ltd.