Stefanos Georgiadis finishes his doctoral studies of Technical Mathematics with distinction

Congratulations from ASC on his thesis on “Modeling and analysis of multicomponent systems for gas mixtures”!

photo of Stefanos Georgiadis

© privat

Stefanos GEORGIADIS completed his master's degree at the National Technical University of Athens in Greece in 2019 and shortly afterwards began his doctoral studies at TU Wien and the King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST) in Saudi Arabia as part of a cotutelle agreement. The aim of his dissertation was to understand and analyze diffusive and thermal effects in multicomponent systems for gas mixtures using nonlinear partial differential equations. In particular, the thesis dealt with Maxwell-Stefan and related systems, which were already proposed 150 years ago by Maxwell and independently by Stefan. The analysis could only be carried out in recent years because the understanding of the cross-diffusion equations had only recently advanced sufficiently.

What is remarkable about the dissertation is the combination of mathematical theory with consistent thermodynamics. The understanding of the thermodynamic relationships was a crucial help in the mathematical analysis using entropy methods. The dissertation is based on five scientific papers and one conference contribution, which is well above average for a doctorate. Accordingly, the reviewers Prof. Ewelina ZATORSKA (Warwick, UK) and Prof. Vincent GIOVANGIGLI (Paris, France) were very positive about the performance of Stefanos Georgiadis who successfully defended the thesis on 17 June 2024. He will remain at KAUST for a short time before starting a postdoctoral position at the University of L'Aquila (Italy).

Welcome to the Institute of Analysis and Scientific Computing (ASC) at the Faculty of Mathematics and Geoinformation of TU Wien!

Our institute currently comprises 19 research groups with more than 60 scientific staff members. In addition, more than 50 student assistants are employed to run the tutorial groups of our courses.

We actively conduct mathematical research in pure and applied mathematics with currently around 25 ongoing research projects. Most of our research topics are from the areas of Computational Science and Engineering as well as Quantum Physics and Quantum Technologies at TU Wien, our focus of attention being the further development of applied mathematics.

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Prof. Dirk PRAETORIUS

Research

A three dimensional velocity field of a flow around a cylinder

© Michael Feischl

Pure and applied mathematics in conjunction with mechanical engineering and natural sciences.

Primary TU research interests:

  • Computational Science and Engineering
  • Quantum Physics and Quantum Technologies