Serafim Kalliadasis


Serafim Kalliadasis is an applied mathematician and chemical engineer working at Imperial College London since 2004.

Career

Serafim Kalliadasis did a 5 years undergraduate degree in Chemical Engineering at the Polytechnic School of the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece. He graduated in 1989. In 1990 he started his PhD studies at the University of Notre Dame, USA. His doctoral thesis was in the general of fluid dynamics and was supervised by Prof. H.-C. Chang.
Following his PhD in 1994 he moved on to the University of Bristol, UK, as post-doctoral fellow in applied mathematics.
In 1995 he took up his first academic position at the Chemical Engineering Department of the University of Leeds, UK. In 2004 he was appointed to Readership in Fluid Mechanics at Department of Chemical Engineering, Imperial College, UK, in 2004 and was promoted to Professor in Engineering Science & Applied Mathematics at Imperial College in 2010.

Research

Serafim Kalliadasis' expertise is in the interface between Applied and Computational Mathematics, Complex Systems and Engineering, covering both fundamentals and applications. He leads the Complex Multiscale Systems Group of Imperial College London.

Distinctions

  1. Carrillo, J.A., Kalliadasis, S., Perez, S.P. & Shu, C.-W. 2020 “Well-balanced finite-volume schemes for hydrodynamic equations with general free energy,” SIAM Multiscale Model. Sim. 18 502–541
  2. Gomes, S.N., Kalliadasis, S., Pavliotis, G.A. & Yatsyshin, P. 2019 “Dynamics of the Desai-Zwanzig model in multiwell and random energy landscapes,” Phys. Rev. E 99 Art. No. 032109
  3. Schmuck, M., Pavliotis, G.A. & Kalliadasis, S. 2019 “Recent advances in the evolution of interfaces: thermodynamics, upscaling, and universality,” Comp. Mater. Sci. 156 441–451
  4. Yatsyshin, P., Parry, A.O., Rascón, C. & Kalliadasis, S. 2018 ``Wetting of a plane with a narrow solvophobic stripe,” Mol. Phys. 116 1990–1997
  5. Yatsyshin, P., Durán-Olivencia, M.A. & Kalliadasis, S. 2018 “Microscopic aspects of wetting using classical density functional theory,” J. Phys.-Condens. Matt. 30 Art. No. 274003
  6. Dallaston, M.C., Fontelos, M.A., Tseluiko, D. & Kalliadasis S. 2018 “Discrete self-similarity in interfacial hydrodynamics and the formation of iterated structures,” Phys. Rev. Lett. 120