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Civil & Environmental Engineering
Engineering Sustainable Infrastructure for the Future      
  •  
Jiann-Wen Woody Ju, Ph.D., P.E.     
Professor
5731K Boelter Hall
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering
University of California
Los Angeles, CA 90095-1593
juj@ucla.edu
Phone: (310) 206-1751      Fax: (310) 206-2222
 

Education  |  Selected Awards and Honors  |  Research Interests

 Education
• Post-Doctoral Fellow, (1986-87), University of California, Berkeley, and Stanford University
• Ph.D., (1986), University of California, Berkeley
• M.S., (1983), University of California, Berkeley
• B.S., (1980), National Taiwan University
 Selected Awards and Honors
• Election as Ordinary Member of General Council of the Intl Association of Computational Mechanics, July 2009.
• Chang-Jiang Scholar Chair Professor, 2009-2012, Ministry of Education, P.R. China.
• ACI Fellow Election, the American Concrete Institute, Nov. 2008.
• Invited Chair Professor, LMT Cachan, ENS Cachan/CNRS, University of Paris VI, France, AY 2008-2009.
• Invited Visiting Professor, City University of Hong Kong, November to December 2009, under the Academic Exchange Fund of the City University of Hong Kong..
• 2008 Publication Award of Merit, the the Structural Engineers Association of Illinois, June 2008.
• Editorial Board, Acta Mechanica (An Intl. Journal), March 2008-present, Springer-Verlag GmbH.
• Editorial Board, Journal of Chongqing University (English Edition), April 2008-present.
• Editorial Board, Book Series in Computational and Experimental Methods in Structures, June 2008-present, Imperial College Press & World Scientific Publishing Co., USA, UK and Singapore
• Engineering Panel, Research Grant Council of Hong Kong, Sep. 2008- June 2010.
• USACM Fellow Award, the U.S. Association for Computational Mechanics, 2007.
• Distinguished Visiting Professor, the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Institute of Mechanics, July-August 2007.
• Election as General Council Member and Executive Council Member, the International Chinese Association for Computational Mechanics, July 2007-2015.
• Principal Co-Chair of ASME Award Endowments for the “Thomas J.R. Hughes AMD Young Investigator Award” and the “Theodore Belytschko Applied Mechanics Award”, the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2006-2007.
• ASCE Fellow Election, The American Society of Civil Engineers, 2006.
• Election as Member-at-Large and Executive Committee Member, the U.S. Association for Computational Mechanics, Dec. 2006.
• Editor, the International Journal of Damage Mechanics, Sage Publications, London, Sep. 2006-present.
• ACI-James Instruments Award for Research Paper in Non-destructive Testing, American Concrete Institute, 2000.
• ASME Fellow Election, The American Society of Mechanical Engineers, Feb. 1998.
• Walter L. Huber Civil Engineering Research Prize, The American Society of Civil Engineers, 1997.
• Associate Editor, The Journal of Applied Mechanics, ASME, 1995-2002.
• Associate Editor, The Journal of Engineering Materials and Technology, ASME, 1995-2001.
• Presidential Young Investigator Award (1991-98), National Science Foundation and White House, 1991.
• Alfred Rheinstein Faculty Award, Princeton University, 1991.
• Plenary/Keynote Speaker, the 2nd International Symposium on Computational Mechanics, and the 12th International Conference on the Enhancement and Promotion of Computational Methods in Engineering and Science, Hong Kong and Macau, November 30, 2009.
• Keynote Speaker, Symposium on Multiscale Damage and Failure Mechanics of Engineering Materials, 10th U.S. National Congress on Computational Mechanics, Greater Columbus Convention Center, Columbus, Ohio, July 18, 2009.
• Keynote Speaker, Symposium on Multiscale Damage and Failure Mechanics of Engineering Materials, 8th World Congress on Computational Mechanics, Venice Lido Convention Center, Lido, Venice, Italy, July 3, 2008.
• Semi-Plenary Speaker, International Symposium on Computational Mechanics, Beijing, China, July 30, 2007.
• Keynote Speaker, Symposium on Multiscale Damage and Failure Mechanics, 9th U.S. National Congress on Computational Mechanics, Hyatt Regency San Francisco, July 25, 2007.
• Citation in Who's Who in the World, by Marquis Who's Who.
• Citation in Who's Who in America, by Marquis Who's Who.
• Citation in Who's Who in Science and Engineering, by Marquis Who's Who.
• Citation in Who's Who in American Education, by Marquis Who's Who.
• Citation in Who's Who in the West, by Marquis Who's Who.
• Citation in Who's Who in Finance and Business, by Marquis Who's Who.
• Chairman of American Concrete Institute Committee 446 on “Fracture Mechanics” (2004-2008).
 Research Interests
 My current research interests concern mechanics of materials and constitutive modelings of advanced engineering materials. In particular, I am interested in micromechanical damage mechanics of brittle composites, micromechanics of random heterogeneous elastic and inelastic fibrous and particulate composites, continuum elastoplastic damage mechanics, plasticity and viscoplasticity theories and computational algorithms, advanced constitutive modeling of materials, nonlinear computational mechanics, nondestrucdtive and destructive testing, durability, reliability, sulfate attack, and construction defects. Applications can be made to plain and rebar/cable reinforced concrete, fiber reinforced concrete, cementitious composites, mortar and stucco, geological materials, advanced ceramics and ceramic composites, polymer composites, laminated composites, multi-layered materials, metals and metal matrix composites, nanomaterials, nanocomposites, biomaterials, human bones, and so on.

In the treatment of micromechanical damage mechanics, I consider microcrack densities, orientations, sizes, locations, configurations, statistical aspects, interactions, fracture mechanics criteria, and evolutionary microcrack models. The effects of microcracks and their interactions on effective properties of brittle solids are investigated. Similarly, the microgeometry and interaction effects of fibers and particles in heterogeneous composites on overall effective properties of elastic and inelastic composites are studied. Rigorous local micromechanical solutions together with the volume/ensemble averaging procedures lead to innovative predictions of mechanical properties of composites. Materials science imaging is used to characterize microstructures.

I also perform studies in nondestructive and destrucitve testing of concrete and stucco subject to sulfate and environmental attack; damage, fracture and failure of concrete components and systems; and construction defects (construction defect expert).

The continuum elastoplastic damage mechanics research involves the development of rigorous operator splitting methodology, constitutive integration equations, return mapping algorithms, parameter estimation, experiemental validations, and consistent tange nt operators for the finite element implementation. In computational mechanics, my research involves solution strategy for finite element methods, nonlinear frictional contact problems, strain softening damage and plasticity, and localization of deformation problems.

Education  |  Selected Awards and Honors  |  Research Interests

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UCLA Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering     5731/5732 Boelter Hall     405 Hilgard Avenue     Los Angeles, CA  90095-1593
Tel: (310) 825-1346     Fax: (310) 206-2222     E-mail: ceedept@cee.ucla.edu