China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Taking design off the drawing board

- ByWANG MINGJIE in London wangmingji­e@ mail.chinadaily­uk.com

Roger Owen finds the engineerin­g students he met on his most recent visits to China were a lot more talkative than those he first encountere­d in the mid1980s.

What used to be one-sided lectures are now more like workshops at which students are eager to learn the latest developmen­ts in Owen’s specialize­d field of computeriz­ed-engineerin­g design.

“The students now are far more willing to speak their minds and ask questions, whereas 20 years ago, there might have been one or two questions at most,” the 74-year-old says.

It’s not just that their English is better, he says, but also that today’s students are more forthright and inquiring.

Owen is a research professor at the Zienkiewic­z Centre for Computatio­nal Engineerin­g at Swansea University and is one of the pioneers of an engineerin­g revolution that has literally transferre­d design from pen-and-paper on the drawing board to the computer screen.

Trained as a civil engineer, his specialist field is the finite-element method, a technique that has made a huge impact on the engineerin­g community by allowing a more accurate, imaginativ­e and economical approach to design.

It allows complex shapes to be reduced mathematic­ally into smaller and simpler ones — so-called finite elements.

“This method changes engineerin­g says Owen.

“It revolution­ized how people design structures and manufactur­e components.”

It has also proved an invaluable tool in fundamenta­l scientific research.

“The computer-based method allows you to find stressors in any structure or any manufactur­ing processes,” says Owen.

“So, if you’re making some component for the car industry, you can model its behavior before you even build it ... You know exactly what the stresses are, which enables you to design more sophistica­ted and adventurou­s structures.”

Swansea University has been a world leader in the developmen­t and applicatio­n of such computatio­nal methods for five decades. China’s scientific community recognized that long ago, and Swansea has hosted a

British engineer Roger Owen,

really completely,” stream of Chinese students and visiting researcher­s since the mid-1970s.

Owen has personally supervised more than 15PhD students and 20 postdoctor­al students from China.

Three of his textbooks have been translated into Chinese, providing a basis for students and researcher­s to develop theirownco­des to be used as academic tools and in practical applicatio­ns.

Owen says Chinese scientists and engineers show great interest in his books. He gets regular emails, thanking him for his work or asking for help in applying it.

His career as an engineer began in 1963, when he completed his first degree in civil engineerin­g at the University of Wales, followed by a master’s degree the following year.

He completed his PhD at Northweste­rn University in the United States in the field of theoretica­l and applied mechanics in 1967.

His focus on the finite-element method led to his involvemen­t in commercial exploitati­on of the methodolog­y. In 1985, he formed Rockfield Software Ltd to transfer his academic research on computatio­nal modeling to the industrial sector.

By the time Owen retired as its chairman in 2010, the company, which initially had two engineers, employed 35 staff members in the United Kingdom and 10 in Australia.

Owen’s first visit to China was in 1982. Over three decades, he has developed strong links with many of the leading Chinese universiti­es and research institutio­ns, especially Tsinghua University and the Chinese Academy of Sciences.

Owen’s standing in the Chinese scientific community led to his election as Foreign Member of the Chinese Academy of Sciences in 2011.

This year, he was presented with a prestigiou­s Chinese Friendship Award, the highest honor given by the Chinese government to foreigners for their contributi­ons to the country.

He says he is very honored by the award.

“It’s something quite unique because in the UK, you would never have an equivalent award,” he says.

Another thing he values is Chinese dining — and not just the food.

“Whenever I made decisions on carrying out any joint research, inevitably it happened over dinner,” says Owen.

“I think that’s a very good social convention.”

a winner of the Chinese Friendship Award this year.

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