Lu Wang | Laser Melting | Innovative Research Award

Innovative Research Award

Lu Wang
City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong

Lu Wang
Affiliation City University of Hong Kong
Country Hong Kong
Scopus ID 57219357752
Documents 35
Citations 1,520
h-index 19
Subject Area Laser Melting
Event Metallurgical Engineering Awards
ORCID 0000-0001-5055-5539

Lu Wang of City University of Hong Kong has contributed to the development of predictive frameworks for laser-based manufacturing processes, including evaporation dynamics, keyhole pore formation, and multi-scale modeling approaches.[1] The Innovative Research Award recognizes notable scholarly contributions in the field of laser melting and metal additive manufacturing, with particular emphasis on computational modeling, thermodynamic simulations, and advanced manufacturing systems. The research portfolio reflects interdisciplinary engagement across manufacturing science, computational mechanics, and material processing technologies.[2]

Abstract

Lu Wang’s research activities in laser melting and additive manufacturing technologies. The profile emphasizes scientific contributions to computational modeling, thermoelectric magnetohydrodynamic systems, multi-phase flow simulations, and evaporation-induced material behavior in laser processing environments. The body of work demonstrates engagement with advanced numerical simulations and manufacturing optimization methodologies relevant to modern metallurgical engineering.[3] Publications in high-impact journals further indicate ongoing participation in internationally recognized research initiatives focused on additive manufacturing science and engineering applications.[4]

Keywords

Laser Melting, Additive Manufacturing, Metal Processing, Thermodynamic Modeling, Computational Materials Science, Multi-scale Simulation, Powder Bed Fusion, Metallurgical Engineering, Keyhole Dynamics, Manufacturing Systems

Introduction

Additive manufacturing technologies have become increasingly important in contemporary metallurgical engineering due to their ability to fabricate complex geometries with enhanced material efficiency and process control. Within this field, laser melting and powder bed fusion processes require advanced understanding of thermal behavior, fluid flow, and material interactions at multiple scales.[2] Lu Wang’s research activities have focused on addressing scientific challenges associated with metal additive manufacturing systems.

Research Profile

Lu Wang currently serves as Assistant Professor in the Department of Mechanical Engineering at City University of Hong Kong. Prior academic appointments included a postdoctoral fellowship at the National University of Singapore. Academic training encompasses doctoral studies in additive manufacturing and computational modeling, supported by engineering education in ship and marine structure design.[1]

These activities have been associated with major funding initiatives and interdisciplinary engineering programs focused on next-generation manufacturing technologies.[3]

Research Contributions

Research contributions attributed to Lu Wang include the development of computational frameworks for understanding evaporation behavior and keyhole formation during laser-based additive manufacturing processes. The studies provide insights into thermal-fluid interactions and process stability under high-energy manufacturing conditions.[2]

Publications

Representative publications demonstrate sustained scholarly engagement in additive manufacturing science and computational materials engineering. Research articles have appeared in journals including Advanced Functional Materials, npj Computational Materials, Physical Review Applied, and International Journal of Machine Tools and Manufacture.[2]

  1. Wang, L., Guo, Z., Peng, G., Wu, S., Zhang, Y., & Yan, W. Evaporation-Induced Composition Evolution in Metal Additive Manufacturing. Advanced Functional Materials, 2024.
  2. Wang, L., Zhang, Y., Chia, H. Y., & Yan, W. Mechanism of keyhole pore formation in metal additive manufacturing. npj Computational Materials, 2022.

Research Impact

The documented citation record and publication output indicate measurable research influence within the fields of additive manufacturing and metallurgical engineering. Several publications have been recognized through citation performance metrics, including designation as highly cited research articles within engineering and applied physics disciplines.[2]

Award Suitability

The Innovative Research Award is intended to recognize scholarly achievement, originality, and measurable contribution to metallurgical engineering research. Lu Wang’s research profile demonstrates alignment with these objectives through sustained publication activity, interdisciplinary engineering investigations, and participation in internationally recognized additive manufacturing research programs.[1]

Conclusion

Lu Wang’s academic profile reflects active contributions to additive manufacturing science and metallurgical engineering through research involving laser melting systems, computational modeling, and process optimization methodologies. The publication record, citation metrics, and participation in collaborative research initiatives collectively support recognition within the field of advanced manufacturing engineering. The Innovative Research Award therefore represents an appropriate acknowledgment of ongoing scholarly engagement and scientific contribution in the domain of laser-based manufacturing technologies.

References

  1. Wang, L., & Yan, W. (2023). Multi-phase flow simulation of powder streaming in laser-based directed energy deposition.
    https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0017931023003927
  2. Wang, L., Zhang, Y., Chia, H. Y., & Yan, W. (2022). Mechanism of keyhole pore formation in metal additive manufacturing. npj Computational Materials, 8(1), 22.
    https://www.nature.com/articles/s41524-022-00699-6
  3. Wang, L., Guo, Q., Chen, L., & Yan, W. (2023). In-situ experimental and high-fidelity modelling tools to advance understanding of metal additive manufacturing. International Journal of Machine Tools and Manufacture.
    https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijmachtools.2023.104077
  4. Wang, L., & Yan, W. (2021). Thermoelectric magnetohydrodynamic model for laser-based metal additive manufacturing. Physical Review Applied, 15(6), 064051.
    https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevApplied.15.064051
  5. Wang, L., Guo, Z., Peng, G., Wu, S., Zhang, Y., & Yan, W. (2024). Evaporation-Induced Composition Evolution in Metal Additive Manufacturing. Advanced Functional Materials.
    https://doi.org/10.1002/adfm.202412071