By: Eli Freund, Editorial Communications Manager, UConn School of Engineering
During every new school year, a new crop of students come on to campus, ready to make connections, get involved and take on new challenges. But, behind the scenes, is often a group of other new faces—faculty—who are stepping into a new environment, with similar goals.
This Fall, this new group of faculty contains nine talented researchers and educators, hailing from as close as the University of Connecticut, to as far as The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, and range from having several years of experience as a faculty member to fresh out of a Ph.D. program.
Below are the nine faculty members who have joined UConn Engineering this Fall:
Name: Hanna Aknouche-Martinsson
Title: Associate Professor-In-Residence
Department: Computer Science & Engineering
Bio: Prior to joining UConn, Aknouche-Martinsson served as an assistant professor at University West, Sweden, for eight years. During her time there, she taught courses in algorithmics, robot vision, robot modelling, probabilistic robotics and physics. Previously, she was part of the algorithmics team at a medical imaging company, developing algorithms for automated vessel analysis. Aknouche-Martinsson received her Ph.D. in computer vision from Université de Clermont-Ferrand, France, in 2008. She received her M.Sc. in engineering physics from Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden, and Ecole Centrale Paris, France, in 2002 as part of a double degree program.
Name: Osama Bilal
Title: Assistant Professor
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Bio: Bilal is interested in designing intelligent, autonomous and multifunctional materials and structures through understanding of correlations between geometry, symmetry, periodicity and mechanical properties of materials. His research interests spans dynamics of structures and materials, acoustic metamaterials, soft robotics, additive manufacturing, topology optimization, haptics and fluid-structure interaction, which requires combining theory, numerical simulations and experiments. Bilal received his training at Caltech, ETH Zurich, CU-Boulder and Cairo University in aerospace and mechanical engineering, computer science and condensed matter physics. His research is published in multidisciplinary outlets such as Nature, the National Academy of Sciences, Physical Review Letters, Advanced Materials, and others. He has been awarded multiple patents and has received several honors, including the ARL postdoctoral fellowship (Army), ETH postdoctoral fellowship (ETH), the Graduate Student Service Award (CU-Boulder), the International Student Award (CU-Boulder), the Outstanding Academic Achievement Award (CU-Boulder) and the Phononics Fellowship (National Science Foundation), among others.
Name: Francesco Carbone
Title: Assistant Professor
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Bio: Francesco Carbone joined the Department of Mechanical Engineering at University of Connecticut in Fall 2019 after serving at Yale University in the Department of Mechanical Engineering and Materials Science as research faculty from 2014 to 2019 as well as a lecturer in 2018. Previously, he held research positions in the Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering at the University of Southern California from 2012 to 2014, in the Department of Mechanical Engineering at Yale University from 2010 to 2012, and in the Combustion Research Institute at the National Research Council (Italy) from 2008 to 2010. Francesco earned his M.Sc. in Mechanical Engineering and his Ph.D. in Chemical Engineering from the University of Naples Federico II (Italy) in 2005 and 2008, respectively.
Name: Caiwen Ding
Title: Assistant Professor
Department: Computer Science & Engineering
Bio: Ding received his Ph.D. from the Electrical and Computer Engineering Department at Northeastern University in 2019. His interests include efficient machine learning & deep neural network systems, neuromorphic computing and non-von Neumann computing, efficient computing for cyber-physical systems and embedded systems.
Name: Suining He
Title: Assistant Professor
Department: Computer Science & Engineering
Bio: He received his Ph.D. from the Computer Science & Engineering Department at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (HKUST). His research interests include location-based services, urban and mobile computing, data analytics and smart transportation. He was a Google Ph.D. Fellow in Mobile Computing in 2015.
Name: Seung-Hyun Hong
Title: Assistant Professor-In-Residence
Department: Computer Science & Engineering
Bio: Hong received his Ph.D. in Electrical and Computer Engineering from the University of Connecticut in 2005. Before this new role, Hong served as an assistant research professor in the Department of Computer Science and Engineering at UConn. His research interests include static/dynamic bone histomorphometry, assessing bone defect repair, automated image analysis, image processing and pattern recognition. Hong has taught multiple CSE undergrad/grad level courses including digital image processing, data mining, and introduction to discrete systems.
Name: Fiona Leek
Title: Assistant Professor-In-Residence
Department: Materials Science & Engineering
Bio: Leek has over 25 years of experience in the area of polymer characterization and product failure analysis. In her current position as Senior Forensic Scientist at the Travelers Risk Control Lab, Leek investigates materials failures related to loss of property, business, and personal injury. For ten years prior, she served as Interim Director and Associate Director of UConn’s Industrial Affiliates Program (IAP). In this capacity, Leek worked with scientists and engineers from a wide variety of Connecticut companies who needed access to the range of analytical tools and faculty expertise at UConn’s Institute of Materials Science to solve various materials-related challenges. During this time, she also served as a co-advisor for several MSE Senior Design teams and as a mentor for the Society of Polymer Engineers (SPE) Polymer Graduate Student Chapter and the UConn Connects program. Leek also spent nine years working at Millipore Corporation as a Senior and a Consulting Senior Research Scientist and two years at T.A. Instruments as an Applications Scientist. Leek has an M.S. degree in Textile Science and Engineering from North Carolina State University and an M.S and Ph.D. in Polymer Science from UConn.
Name: Alexei Poludnenko
Title: Associate Professor
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Bio: Poludnenko received his bachelor’s degree in Physics and Mathematics from the National University “Kyiv-Mohyla Academy” in Kyiv, Ukraine, and Masters and Ph.D. degrees in Physics and Astronomy from the University of Rochester. Upon graduation, he joined the Department of Energy ASC Flash Center at the University of Chicago as a postdoctoral researcher. Subsequently, Poludnenko worked at the Naval Research Laboratory first as a National Research Council postdoctoral fellow and later as a permanent research staff member. Prior to joining the UConn Mechanical Engineering Department in the Fall of 2019, he had been an associate professor in the Department of Aerospace Engineering at Texas A&M University. His research includes theoretical and computational studies of complex multi-physics reacting and non-reacting flows, numerical algorithm development for computational fluid dynamics, and high-performance computing. Poludnenko was a recipient of the Distinguished Paper Awards at the 36th and 37th International Symposia on Combustion (2017 and 2019), the 2016 François Frenkiel Award for Fluid Mechanics of the American Physical Society Division of Fluid Dynamics, and the Alan Berman Research Publication Award from the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory.
Name: Jacob Scoggin
Title: Assistant Professor-In-Residence
Department: Computer Science & Engineering
Bio: Scoggin earned his B.S. in Nanosystems Engineering from Louisiana Tech University in 2012, an M.S. in Electrical Engineering at Louisiana Tech University in 2014, and a Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering from the University of Connecticut in 2019. His research interests include semiconductor devices and phase change memory.