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2015 GRADUATE STUDIES

STRUCTURAL ENGINEERING,
MECHANICS AND MATERIALS
S tructural Engineering, Mechanics and Materials offers graduate instruction and research in structural analysis and design, design opti-
mization, behavior of structural systems, blast-resistant design, earthquake engineering, engineering science and mechanics, high-perfor-
mance materials, computer-aided engineering, and intelligent engineering learning environments. The faculty, students and staff are encouraged
to form partnerships to create an environment that fosters learning, discovery and creativity. The faculty are leaders in their respective fields
and are committed to developing in their students the skills needed to be successful in the structural engineering profession. The program’s
academic and research activities have earned an international reputation for excellence in areas such as creative use of advanced structural
materials and composite systems to improve infrastructure; earthquake engineering; computer-aided structural engineering software that is
used by hundreds of companies worldwide; cladding effects on, and hybrid control of, the response of tall buildings to earthquakes and wind;
design and construction of horizontally curved bridges; steel connection design and behavior; and structural reliability and risk assessment.
Students can become involved in research activities that promote multidisciplinary solutions to civil engineering problems of global importance.

RESEARCH AREAS SELECTED COURSES FA C I L I T I E S

• Auto-adaptive Materials
• Blast Design
• Computational Mechanics and
• Advanced Applied Mathematics
in Engineering
• Advanced Dynamics and
G eorgia Tech is equipped with state-
of-the-art laboratories and instru-
ments for all aspects of modern structural
Structural Analysis Smart Structures engineering and structural mechanics and
• Computer-Aided Structural Engineering • Advanced Mechanics of Composites materials research.
• Durability of Construction Materials • Advanced Solid Mechanics
• Earthquake Engineering • Advanced Strength of Materials • An 18,000-square-foot Structures and
• Engineering Learning Environments • Bridge Engineering Materials Laboratory with an 8,000-
• High-performance Concrete and Steel • Computational Methods in Mechanics square-foot strong floor, an L-shaped
• Horizontally Curved Bridges • Damage, Failure and Durability of reaction wall with capacities of 100
• Industrial Buildings Composite Materials to 300 kips, and two 30-ton-capacity
• Masonry Structures • Design of Polymer cranes.
• Nano/Microstructure of Composite Structures • A broad range of universal testing
Cement-based Materials • Durability of Cement-based Materials machines, with capacity to 400 kips
• Polymeric Composite Materials • Earthquake Engineering • Specialized facilities for mechanical
• Protective Systems • Engineering Programming Methods testing with infrared thermography and
• Quantitative Nondestructive Evaluation • Finite Element Method of photoelastic stress/strain analysis
• Rehabilitation of Structural Systems Structural Analysis • A nondestructive evaluation/
• Reliable Engineering Computing • Inelastic Design optics laboratory
• Risk Analysis • Introduction to Bridge Engineering • A laser scanning confocal microscope
• Seismic Hazard Mitigation • Manufacturing of Composites • Shock loading laboratory with large-
• Shock and Impact Loadings • Material Science of Concrete scale velocity generator
• Smart Materials and Structures • Matrix Structural Analysis • Numerous high-performance worksta-
• Solid Mechanics in Small Scales and • Multi-hazard Analysis and Design tions equipped with state-of-the-art
Geometric Mechanics • NDE and Forensic Evaluation software in structural engineering
• Stability Design of Structures • Nonlinear Finite Element Analysis and mechanics
• Steel Connections • Prestressed Concrete
• Structural Control • Random Vibrations
• Structural Health Monitoring • Rehabilitation of Existing Structures
• Structural Reliability • Reinforced Concrete Members
• Reinforced Concrete Slab Systems
• Structural Design Optimization
• Structural Dynamics
• Structural Modeling
• Structural Reliability
• Structural Steel Design
• Structural Systems
• Theory of Elastic Stability
FACULTY
NELSON C. BAKER, PH.D. DEAN, PROFESSIONAL EDUCATION & LAUREN STEWART, PH.D. ASSISTANT PROFESSOR
ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR
Full-scale experiments and computational modeling to study the ef-
Intelligent learning environments for engineering; applications of artifi- fects of blast, earthquakes and their impacts on structures made of a
cial intelligence and other computer-based techniques to solve engi- variety of materials.
neering problems; robotic applications to civil engineering.
PHANISH SURYANARAYANA, PH.D. ASSISTANT PROFESSOR
REGINALD DESROCHES, PH.D. Multiscale modeling; ab-initio calculations; density functional theory;
KAREN AND JOHN HUFF SCHOOL CHAIR & PROFESSOR continuum mechanics and smart materials; efficient numerical meth-
Natural hazards risk assessment and mitigation; earthquake engineer- ods for solving problems arising in a variety of fields.
ing; impact dynamics; design and analysis of bridge structures; protec-
tive systems; and structural applications of smart materials. IRIS TIEN, PH.D. ASSISTANT PROFESSOR
Probabilistic methods for modeling and reliability assessment of civil
BARRY J. GOODNO, PH.D. PROFESSOR infrastructure systems, stochastic processes, risk analysis, structural
Earthquake engineering; structural dynamics; matrix structural analy- and infrastructure health monitoring, signal processing and machine
sis; hybrid control of structures; influence of nonstructural components learning, and decision making under uncertainty.
on building response; vibrations; finite element analysis; mechanics of
materials. YANG WANG, PH.D. ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR
Structural health monitoring and damage detection, decentralized
LAURENCE J. JACOBS, PH.D. COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING structural control, smart materials and structures, wireless sensor net-
ASSOCIATE DEAN FOR ACADEMIC AFFAIRS & PROFESSOR works, structural dynamics and earthquake engineering.
Quantitative nondestructive evaluation of civil engineering materials;
wave propagation in solids, emphasizing guided waves; nonlinear DONALD W. WHITE, PH.D. PROFESSOR & GROUP COORDINATOR
methods and heterogeneous materials; optical techniques; acoustic Computational mechanics, numerical methods, structural stability,
sensors for condition monitoring of structural components. steel structures, computer-aided engineering of building and bridge
structures.
KIMBERLY E. KURTIS, PH.D.
COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING ASSOCIATE DEAN FOR FACULTY ARASH YAVARI, PH.D. ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR
DEVELOPMENT AND SCHOLARSHIP & PROFESSOR Solid mechanics in small scales, ferroelectrics, magnetoelastic and
Multi-scale structure and performance (i.e., early age through dura- electroelastic interactions, lattice theories of solids, geometric continu-
bility) of cement-based materials, cement and admixture chemistry, um mechanics, configurational forces, and fractal fracture mechanics.
characterization of cement-based materials, fiber-cement composites,
sustainable construction materials, forensics. ABDUL-HAMID ZUREICK, PH.D. PROFESSOR
High-performance fiber-reinforced composite and stainless steel
RAFI L. MUHANNA, PH.D. ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR structures, strengthening of building and bridge structures, steel
Computational solid and structural mechanics; uncertainty modeling; structures, structural stability, structural optimization, bridge struc-
reliable engineering computing; structural reliability; finite elements. tures, anisotropic elasticity.

GLAUCIO H. PAULINO, PH.D.

RESEARCH FACULTY
RAYMOND ALLEN JONES CHAIR & PROFESSOR
Computational mechanics, functionally graded materials, experimen-
tal methods, constitutive modeling of engineering materials, multiscale
phenomena, high-order continuum, fracture and damage mechanics,
CHUANG-SHENG (WALTER) YANG, PH.D., P.E.
solution adaptive techniques, inverse problems in mechanics, sensitiv-
RESEARCH ENGINEER II & INSTRUCTOR
ity analysis and optimization, and topology design of structures.
JIN YEON KIM, PH.D.
DAVID W. SCOTT, PH.D. ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR SENIOR RESEARCH ENGINEER
Design and use of advanced fiber-reinforced composites in infrastruc-
ture applications, structural strengthening and rehabilitation, forensics

ADJUNCT FACULTY
and nondestructive assessment, design of roadside safety structures.

T. RUSSELL GENTRY, PH.D., P.E.


ROBERTO T. LEON, PH.D.

EMERITUS FACULTY
BRUCE R. ELLINGWOOD, PH.D.
LAWRENCE F. KAHN, PH.D.
GERALD WEMPNER, PH.D.
KENNETH M. WILL, PH.D.

@CEEATGT
For more information, visit ce.gatech.edu/research/semm
School of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA 30332-0355
404.894.2246 | gradinfo@ce.gatech.edu | ce.gatech.edu/academics/graduate

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