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Weinstein, Steven J.
Department Head and Professor of Chemical Engineering
Program Faculty - PhD Program in Mathematical Modeling (MM)

Education

  • PhD in Chemical Engineering
    University of Pennsylvania
  • M.S in Chemical Engineering
    University of Pennsylvania
  • B.S. in Chemical Engineering
    University of Rochester

Background

Dr. Steven Weinstein received his B.S. in Chemical Engineering from the University of Rochester and his MS and PhD in Chemical Engineering from the University of Pennsylvania.  He worked for Eastman Kodak Company for 18 years after receiving his PhD.  He is well published in the field of coating, and has focused on thin film flows, die manifold design, wave stability, curtain flows (flows in thin sheets of liquid), and web dynamics; he also has 7 patents in these areas.  He co-authored a well-cited invited review article on Coating Flows in the prestigious Annual Reviews of Fluid Mechanics (2004, Vol. 36). Dr. Weinstein won the CEK Mees award for excellence in research and technical writing (1992; honorable mention 1998), the highest research award bestowed by Eastman Kodak Company, and was recipient of the Young Investigator Award from the International Society of Coating Science and Technology in 2000.  He has served on the board of directors of this society since 2004.  While at Kodak, Dr. Weinstein was also an Adjunct Professor of Chemical Engineering at the University of Rochester, an Adjunct Professor of Mechanical Engineering at the Rochester Institute of Technology (RIT), and an Adjunct Professor of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering at Cornell University. 

Dr. Weinstein joined the faculty of the Department of Mechanical Engineering at Rochester Institute of Technology (RIT) in January of 2007, and along with teaching graduate and undergraduate courses in fluid mechanics and applied math, founded the Department of Chemical Engineering Weinstein in fall of 2008.  In addition to performing his administrative duties as department head and serving on a variety of college and university committees, he teaches chemical engineering courses on material balances in reactive systems, fluid dynamics, chemical thermodynamics, reactor design, separation processes, and applied mathematics. Dr. Weinstein also serves as a core faculty member in the Mathematical Modeling PhD Program at RIT. He maintains his adjunct position at Cornell University, providing guest course lectures and performing research with collaborators there.