Dr. Reza Moheimani

Career Highlights

Appointments

Editor-in-Chief, Mechatronics (2016-2021)

Accolades

Fellow of the International Federation for Automatic Control (IFAC)
Fellow of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
Fellow of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)
Fellow of the Institute of Physics, United Kingdom

Awards

IFAC Mechatronic Systems Lifetime Achievement Award
IFAC Industrial Achievement Award
ASME Charles Stark Draper Innovative Practice Award
IEEE Transactions on Control Systems Technology Outstanding Paper Award (twice)
IFAC Nathaniel B. Nichols Medal
IFAC Mechatronic Systems Outstanding Investigator Award
IEEE Control Systems Technology Award

Innovative Mechatronics Leader Named Head of UT Dallas Department of Systems Engineering

Since joining UT Dallas in 2015, Moheimani has built a multidisciplinary research program, secured substantial funding to support his work, graduated doctoral students, trained postdoctoral researchers and established strong collaborations with industry and national laboratories.

In 2017 his team discovered a method to prevent the tip of the scanning tunneling microscope (STM) from crashing into a sample during scanning, solving a long-standing problem with the instrument. In 2022, they developed a technique that enhances control and precision in atomically precise manufacturing that resulted in a patent for their approach.

“This is a truly pivotal time for us in the Department of Systems Engineering and the Jonsson School, as we embark on a significant expansion of both our teaching and research programs,” Moheimani said. “I am committed to working closely with my colleagues in the department and the school leadership to ensure this growth is successful and positions us toward becoming one of the leading systems engineering departments in the nation.”

Starting this fall, the department will offer a bachelor’s degree in addition to its master’s degree in systems engineering and management.

Moheimani is also a leader of the advanced manufacturing research thrust, a Jonsson School strategic initiative that positions the school to generate $100 million in research expenditures by 2028.

After conducting a national search for the new department head, school leaders decided Moheimani was the best choice for the role. His term as department head started Sept. 1.

Research Success

A significant portion of Moheimani’s research funding has supported his work on MEMS and solid-state quantum device fabrication. His laboratory has focused on several key areas, including the development of MEMS nanopositioners for high-throughput STM-based atomically precise manufacturing, on-chip atomic force microscopy, video-rate scanning probe microscopy and feedback-controlled MEMS force sensing.

Researcher demonstrates using a scanning tunneling microscope
Dr. Reza Moheimani uses high-powered microscopy tools for atomically precise manufacturing.

In addition to his work as a researcher and educator, Moheimani has also been named fellow of several professional societies, served as editor-in-chief of Mechatronics, contributed to the editorial boards of multiple scientific journals and authored a series of research monographs. He began his tenure at UT Dallas with a DARPA grant under the Atoms to Product program.

At the University of Newcastle, Australia, Moheimani founded the Laboratory for Dynamics and Control of Nanosystems. During this time, he collaborated with researchers at IBM Zurich Research Labs in Switzerland to develop feedback control design methods for a novel microelectromechanical data storage system that encoded digital information as nanoscale indentations on a polymer surface. This collaboration produced a control system capable of achieving a positioning accuracy of 0.25 nm —comparable to the diameter of a single atom — which set a world record for data storage density at the time. In recognition of this work, he and his IBM collaborators received the IEEE Control System Technology Award.

Moheimani also received the Nathaniel B. Nichols Medal from IFAC for “fundamental contributions in systems science and control theory of direct relevance to engineering practice in high precision mechatronic systems” and another IEEE Transactions on Control Systems Technology Outstanding Paper Award in 2007.

He is also a fellow of four professional organizations including IEEE, IFAC, the American Society of Mechanical Engineering (ASME) and the Institute of Physics in the United Kingdom.

A Vision of Growth

The program has continued to grow at a steady rate through fast-track and conventional Master of Science in Systems Engineering and Management degrees developed in collaboration with UT Dallas’ Naveen Jindal School of Management. Moheimani and other department leaders envision taking the department to the next level, and he says that he will begin with recruiting new faculty to build the program.

“My immediate focus will be on working closely with the department leadership and administrative staff to ensure a seamless and effective transition of leadership,” Moheimani said. “Following this, my top priority will be the strategic recruitment of exceptional new faculty members to support the significant growth we anticipate in both our undergraduate and graduate programs in the coming years. We aim to bring in talent that will enhance our current strengths and open new avenues for research and education.”

“Our new bachelor’s degree program in systems engineering has been meticulously structured, with its coursework designed to provide a first-rate, comprehensive education,” Moheimani said. “The strong enrollment numbers for our inaugural cohort indicate high interest among incoming students. The master’s program has been a remarkable success story for well over a decade. It consistently provides students from diverse engineering backgrounds with an advanced degree and excellent employment prospects in industry. As our undergraduate program expands and graduates seek further specialization, we anticipate a natural growth in interest for our master’s program.”

Moheimani adds that he wants to continue expanding the department’s collaborations.

“Given that systems engineering is inherently a multidisciplinary field, my vision is for our department to emerge as a central hub for multidisciplinary collaboration within the Jonsson School,” Moheimani said. “We will actively foster an environment where our faculty engage in dynamic, collaborative research with colleagues from other departments and with industry partners.”