Flowserve announces establishment of an award from the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME), memorialising longtime Flowserve employee and pump technology expert Sankaraiyer Gopalakrishnan
The biennial Sankaraiyer Gopalakrishnan-Flowserve Pump Technology Award will recognize a mechanical engineer for achievement in mechanical pump technology with a financial prize.
"Flowserve is extremely proud to sponsor this award because it honours Dr Gopalakrishnan and allows us to recognize the outstanding achievements that are made each year in the field of pump engineering," said Timothy Wotring, vice president of engineering and technology, Flowserve Pumps.
The first Sankaraiyer Gopalakrishnan-Flowserve Pump Technology Award was presented to John Tuzson at the Sankaraiyer Gopalakrishnan memorial session of the 2006 ASME Fluids Engineering Conference in Miami, Florida, on July 17.
Tuzson is recently retired after a career at the BorgWarner Research Center in Des Plaines, Illinois.
At the session, Gopalakrishnan's colleague and close friend Robert Stanbury, an industry consultant and previously vice president of engineering at Flowserve Pumps, summarized some of Gopalakrishnan's achievements, which included publishing more than 50 papers and being awarded four patents.
Gopalakrishnan was elected ASME Fellow in 1995 and received the ASME Fluid Machinery Design Award in 2001.
"Gopalakrishnan was a prime example of a PhD who was effective in applying his educational knowledge of turbomachinery to the commercial environment of a pump company," said Stanbury.
"He was a highly educated academic who was remarkably successful at applying his expertise to the business imperatives of industry".
Gopalakrishnan, who last served as vice president of technology at Flowserve Pumps, led the company's pump research and development, and organized a diverse and geographically dispersed team of engineers through Flowserve's highly successful Virtual Centers of Excellence (VCOEs).
The VCOE program supports five technological disciplines of Flowserve Pumps - fluid dynamics, mechanical design, mechanical analysis, materials and mechatronics - and sets ambitious company goals for achieving progress in these areas.
Gopalakrishnan's technological innovations while at Flowserve included an advanced primary coolant for nuclear reactors, a long-life nuclear seal, and a high-efficiency expander for cryogenic services.
In addition to his scientific contributions to the field, Gopalakrishnan dedicated himself to educating young colleagues.
At Flowserve, he created a series of advanced specialist courses on aspects of pump engineering.
Flowserve continues to offer and develop these courses as career development for its engineers.