Edward Cussler | |
Birth Date: | 1940 |
Birth Place: | United States |
Field: | Chemical Engineer, Materials Science |
Work Institution: | University of Minnesota |
Alma Mater: | Yale University University of Wisconsin, Madison |
Doctoral Advisor: | Edwin N. Lightfoot |
Known For: | Chemical Separation Processes Membranes Technical Communication |
Prizes: | Charles P. Colburn Award, 1975 Fellow of AAAS, 1996 W.K. Lewis Award AIChE, 2001 National Academy of Engineering (2002) Institute Lecture - AIChE, 2014 |
Edward L. Cussler (born 1940) is an American chemical engineer and professor in the department of chemical engineering and materials science at the University of Minnesota. He is internationally known for his work in fluid mechanics, transport phenomena, and gas separations,[1] especially in the areas of membranes and gas sorption. Cussler is an author of more than 250 academic papers, dozens of patents, and five books including the acclaimed text: “Diffusion” (Cambridge, 2009, 3rd Edition).[2] He has served as director, vice president and president of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers (AIChE, 1989–1995), and he presented the AIChE Institute Lecture in 2014.[3] Cussler and his wife Betsy, a former teacher at Edina High School, are long-time residents of Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Cussler took a B.E. degree (with honors) at Yale University in 1961 followed by an M.S. at the University of Wisconsin in 1963. He continued towards a PhD also at Wisconsin, 1965, with his thesis entitled, "Multicomponent Diffusion in Macromolecules," where he was a student of Edwin N. Lightfoot.[4] Throughout his time in school, Ed developed a love for activity with interests in running, swimming and cycling. His hobbies include cycle touring with his wife, and he has run the Boston Marathon many times.
After his PhD, he completed postdoctoral studies at the University of Wisconsin in chemical engineering. Subsequent post-doctoral studies were completed in physical chemistry at the University of Adelaide, South Australia, and Yale University in Connecticut. In 1967, he was hired as an assistant professor in the department of chemical engineering at Carnegie Mellon University, followed by promotion to associate professor in 1970 and full professor in 1973. During his time at Carnegie Mellon University, he completed a sabbatical year at Unilever in the United Kingdom. In 1980, Ed joined the department of chemical engineering and materials science at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis.[5] During his time at Minnesota, Ed has taken sabbaticals at MIT and the University of Cambridge.
Professor Cussler has received numerous honors and awards for teaching and research. He was elected president of the AIChE in 1994. He won the 2001 Warren K. Lewis Award for Chemical Engineering Education from the American Institute of Chemical Engineers.[6] He was inducted into the National Academy of Engineering in 2002, "For pioneering research on membrane transport in chemical and biochemical separation, and for inspiring teaching."[1] He is a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and has received honorary doctorates from the Universities of Lund and Nancy.
On a less serious note, he received the Ig Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 2005 for an experiment settling whether people could swim faster or slower in syrup rather than water.[7]
Professor Cussler has authored over 240 journal publications.[8] Representative publications include:
Professor Cussler has authored five books in the field of chemical engineering: