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Latif M. Jiji
Herbert G. Kayser Professor of Mechanical Engineering
Office: Steinman Hall 225
Tel: (212)650-5228
Fax: (212)650-8013
email: jiji@me.ccny.cuny.edu
 
Education:
B.S. 1952, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
M.S. (Mech.Engr.) 1953, Carnegie Institute of Technology
M.S. (Aeroscience) 1958, University of Michigan
Ph.D. (Mech. Engr.) 1962, University of Michigan

 
Research Interests:
heat transfer
bioheat transfer
teaching and learning enhancement

Professor Jiji's research activities include heat transfer with melting and freezing, cooling of microelectronics, jet impingement, and tissue heat transfer. His recent concerns have focused on teaching and learning enhancement as well as noise suppression in electronic devices. His research has been supported by NSF, NIH, NASA, AR0, OWRR, IBM, DEC, and the AT&T Foundation.
 
Current Collaborators:
Yiannis Andreopoulos, Department of Mechanical Engineering, City College of New York
 
Recent and frequently cited publications:
  • Heat Conduction, Begell House, New York, 2000
  • Heat Transfer Essentials-A Textbook, Begell House, Inc., New York, 1998
  • Jiji, L.M., S. Weinbaum and D.E. Lemon, "Theory and Experiment for the Effect of Vascular Microstructure on Surface Tissue Heat Transfer. Part II: Model Formulation and Solution," ASME J. Biomech. Eng., 106, 331 (1984).
  • Jiji, L.M. and Z. Dagan, "Experimental Investigation of Single-Phase Multi-Jet Impinement Cooling of an Array of Microelectronic Heat Sources," in Cooling Technology for Electronic Eguipment, Ed W. Aung, pp.333-351, Hemisphere Publishing Corp, New York, 1987.
  • Song, W.J. and L.M. JIji, " Peripheral Tissue Freezing in Cryosurgery," Cryobiology, 110,153 (1988).
  • Wang, X.S, Z.Dagan and L.M. Jiji, "Prediction Surface Temperature and Heat Flux of a Microelectronic Chip with Jet Impingement Cooling," ASME J. Electronic Packaging, 112, 57 (1990).
  • Wu, Y.L., S.Weinbaum and L.M. Jiji, "A New Analytic Technique for 3-D Heat Transfer from a Cylinder with Two or More Axially Interacting Eccentrically Embedded Vessels with Application to Countercurrent Blood Flow," Int. J. Heat & Mass Transfer, 36, 1073 (1993).

  • Contact: wan4178@me.ccny.cuny.edu Copyright ©2003 CCNY