Sreekanth Pannala is a senior research staff member in the Computer Science and Mathematics
Division at Oak Ridge National Laboratory. He received his M.S. (1994) and Ph.D. (2000) in Aerospace
Engineering specializing in the area of computational combustion of two-phase flows from Georgia
Tech. His expertise is primarily in the area of developing parallel algorithms and models for heterogeneous chemically reacting flows from device to micro scale. He received Federal Laboratory Technology
Transfer award in 2006 and R&D 100 award in 2007 for his contribution to the development of MFIX
(http://mfix.netl.doe.gov), an open-source multiphase flow simulation suite. He has served as a principal
investigator on various DOE computational science projects and has over 75 conference and technical
publications in various areas of computational science and engineering.
Madhava Syamlal is Focus Area Leader of Computational and Basic Sciences at National Energy
Technology Laboratory, where he is responsible for using computational science to accelerate the development of advanced energy systems. He earned a B.Tech in chemical engineering from IT-BHU (1977)
and an M.S. (1981) and a Ph.D. (1985) in chemical engineering from Illinois Institute of Technology. He
has led the development of the open source multiphase flow code MFIX and the integration CFD and
process simulation, both of which have won R&D 100 awards. In 2009 he received the PTF Fluidization
Process Recognition award from the American Institute of Chemical Engineers.
Thomas J. O’Brien has been a Research Scientist at the NETL since 1979. He obtained a B.S.
in chemistry from the College of St. Thomas (St. Paul, MN) in 1962, a Ph.D. in Physical/Theoretical
Chemistry from the University of Wisconsin (Madison) in 1968, has held postdoctoral positions at The
Queen’s University (Belfast, Northern Ireland) and The Johns Hopkins University, and has been a National Research Council Associate (U. S. Army Ballistics Research Laboratory). He was an Assistant
Professor in the Chemistry Department at Texas Tech University (Lubbock, TX) from 1969-79.Most of
Dr. O’Brien’s research efforts at NETL have been in developing mechanistic mathematical models for
coal conversion processes.