L. Gary Leal - Fellow, Elected 2015
L. Gary Leal
Chemical Engineer
Awarded Bingham Medal 2000
Fellow, Elected 2015
Gary Leal received his B.S. in Chemical Engineering from the University of Washington in 1965. From there, he obtained an M.S. (1968) and Ph.D. (1969) in Chemical Engineering at Stanford University studying with Andreas Acrivos (1994 Bingham medalist
Gary’s research contributions to rheology are characterized by a blend of analysis, computations and sophisticated experiments. His research on drop deformation and breakup led to key results and fundamental insights that have become classic contributions to the field. His group’s results on the dynamics of droplets using a computer-controlled four roll mill laid the foundations for much of the present work on the rheology of blends and emulsions. Furthermore, Gary developed a general theory for describing the dynamics of orientable particles and the migration of particles in weakly-elastic matrix fluids which have become the basis for subsequent constitutive theories for a wide range of microstructural materials. He was also among the first to recognize that the stretching of polymer chains in an inhomogeneous flow depends strongly on the residence time of the chain in different regions of the flow and, together with his student Gerry Fuller (1997 Bingham Medalist
Gary has received numerous awards including a Guggenheim fellowship (1976), the Fluid Dynamics Prize from the American Physical Society (2002), and the G.I. Taylor Medal from the Society of Engineering Science. He was elected to the U.S. Academy of Engineering (1987) and is a fellow of the American Physical Society and the American Institute of Chemical Engineers. In addition, he served as the long-standing editor of the AIP Journal, Physics of Fluids