Carlos Colosqui, PhD
Associate Professor, Mechanical Engineering
Office: Light Engineering 155
Email Address: Carlos.Colosqui@stonybrook.edu
Phone Number: (631) 632-4758
Lab Website: Mesoscale Thermo-Fluid Dynamics Group (MTFD) Lab
Bio:
Carlos Colosqui joined the Department of Mechanical Engineering faculty in the fall
of 2013. Before joining Stony Brook University, he was a research associate at the
Levich Institute for Physicochemical Hydrodynamics at CCNY and the Department of Chemical
and Biomolecular Engineering at Princeton University. He holds a Ph.D. in Mechanical
Engineering from Boston University. Professor Colosqui is also an affiliated faculty
member in the Department of Applied Mathematics & Statistics and is directly involved
in workforce development initiatives for advanced nanofabrication.
Education:
- Boston University, Boston, Ph.D. 2009
Professional Experience:
- Department of Mechanical Engineering, Stony Brook University, 2013- present
- Benjamin Levich Institute for Physicochemical Hydrodynamics, CUNY, 2012-2013
- Department of Chemical & Biological Engineering, Princeton University, 2009-2011
Awards & Publications:
- CEAS Teachers Rated Excellent Educators by their Students (TREES) Award 2025
- Emerging Leaders Program, SBU Provost Office 2022
- Mid-Career Faculty Diversity Award, SBU Provost Office 2020
- Dick A, Tong X, Kisslinger K, Colosqui CE, Doerk G. Polymer-Iron Oxide Hybrid Films for Controlling Electrokinetic Properties. Applied Surface Science Advances 2026
- Dick, A., Iyyapareddy, K., Al Hossain, A., Colosqui, C E. Topographic control of electrical conductivity for enhanced electrokinetic energy conversion. Journal of Power Sources 2025
- Arnot DJ, Yan S, Pace A, Ma L, Ehrlich SN, Takeuchi ES, Marschilok AC, Colosqui CE, Takeuchi KJ. Electrochemistry Beyond Solutions: Modeling Particle Self-Crowding of Nanoparticle Suspensions. Journal of the American Chemical Society 2024
- T Singletary, G Drazer, AC Marschilok, ES Takeuchi, KJ Takeuchi, C.E. Colosqui*. Kinetic trapping of nanoparticles by solvent-induced interactions. Nanoscale 2024
Professional Memberships & Service:
- MEC Undergraduate Program Director, 2024-present
- SBU Turner Fellowship Selection Committee (member), 2024-present
- SBU University Vision Committee (REACH), 2020-2022
Overview:
Professor Colosqui's research involves theoretical, computational, and experimental studies of transport processes in micro- and nanoscale thermofluid systems with nanostructured interfaces. A primary interest centers on mesoscale interfacial processes and the associated novel effects that classical, continuum-based descriptions fail to capture. His group integrates computational modeling, including molecular dynamics, mesoscale simulation, and computational fluid dynamics, with micro/nanofabrication and experimental analysis. Current applications of his work include microfluidic devices for energy conversion and storage, separation processes, functional nanostructured surfaces, and nanoparticle transport and deposition at fluid-solid interfaces.
Highlights & Accomplishments:
- Demonstrated Nanofabrication of Large-Area Ordered Nanostructured Surfaces
- Developed Microfluidic Systems for Electrokinetic Energy Conversion & Nanoparticle Separation
- Applied Molecular Dynamics & Machine Learning for Thermo-Fluid System Design and Analysis
Research Interests:
- Nanomaterials for Energy Conversion, Separation, Sensors, and Actuation
- Integration of Physics-Based and Data-Driven Models for Thermo-Fluid System Optimization
- Workforce Development in Advanced Manufacturing