Soumik Banerjee named ASME fellow

Washington State University logo.

Soumik Banerjee, associate professor in the School of Mechanical and Materials Engineering, has been named a fellow of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME).

About 2% of ASME’s 130,000 members are fellows, which recognizes “exceptional engineering achievements and contributions to the engineering profession.” Banerjee was recognized for his reputation and service to the professional community. 

Closeup of Soumik Banerjee
Soumik Banerjee

With WSU since 2011, Banerjee’s research is focused on atomistic modeling of materials and interfaces, transport processes, electrochemistry, with an attempt to correlate structure to functional properties. Most recently, he has led NASA-funded research that used machine learning and computational modeling to identify solvents to extract materials on the moon and Mars that would be usable in 3D printing.

He leads the Computational Nanoscience Laboratory, which focuses on modeling materials relevant to energy conversion and storage and processing and extraction of critical materials and minerals. Research conducted in the laboratory addresses applications such as sodium ion and lithium batteries, photovoltaic solar cells and processing of ceramic materials.

His work has been published in journals such as the Journal of Chemical Physics, Solid State Ionics, the Journal of Applied Physics and Applied Physics Letters. 

Banerjee is a recipient of the 3M Non-tenured Faculty Award. He also received WSU’s GPSA Academic Advisor Excellence Award. He serves as an associate editor of the Journal of Electrochemical Energy Conversion and Storage and is on the editorial board of Computational Thermal Sciences. He holds a PhD in engineering mechanics from Virginia Tech, a master’s degree from University of Illinois, Chicago, and a bachelor’s degree from Jadavpur University in Kolkata, India.

Next Story

WSU Writing Program welcomes Angela Mitchell as director

The Writing Program and its units system-wide will be led starting July 1 by Mitchell, current director of first-year writing at the University of North Carolina-Charlotte.

Recent News

Study shows how night shift work can raise risk of diabetes, obesity

SPOKANE, Wash. – Just a few days on a night shift schedule throws off protein rhythms related to blood glucose regulation, energy metabolism and inflammation, processes that can influence the development of chronic metabolic conditions. The finding, from a study led by scientists at Washington State University and the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, provides new […]

Student turns textile scraps into wearable art

Apparel design and merchandising double major Kiah Conway recently created a dress and a jacket, using almost nothing but leftover material from a storage closet.

THC lingers in breastmilk with no clear peak point

WSU-led research found that, unlike alcohol, when THC was detected in breastmilk there was no consistent time when its concentration peaked and started to decline.