World's Best Scientists 2026 revealed!

D-Index & Metrics

Engineering and Technology

D-Index
43
Citations
6489
World Ranking
6250
National Ranking
395

Research.com Recognitions

  • 2018 - Fellow of the Combustion Institute for innovative research on the development and application of mechanism reduction, sensitivity analysis and uncertainty quantification in combustion models

Overview

Alison S. Tomlin is affiliated with the University of Leeds in the United Kingdom. The primary fields of study for their research are Engineering and Chemical Engineering. Their work often spans multiple subfields, notably Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes, Biomedical Engineering, Computational Mechanics, Aerospace Engineering, and Pollution.

The main research topics addressed by Alison S. Tomlin include Advanced Combustion Engine Technologies, Biodiesel Production and Applications, Combustion and Flame Dynamics, Combustion and Detonation Processes, Energy and Environment Impacts, Air Quality and Health Impacts, and Biofuel Production and Bioconversion.

Their publication record features papers in frequent venues such as Energy & Fuels, Combustion and Flame, International Journal of Chemical Kinetics, Renewable Energy, and Fuel. Key recent papers include:

  • Air Quality and Climate Impacts of Biomass Use as an Energy Source: A Review, 2021, Energy & Fuels
  • A method for estimating the potential power available to building mounted wind turbines within turbulent urban air flows, 2020, Renewable Energy
  • Laminar burning velocities and Markstein numbers for pure hydrogen and methane/hydrogen/air mixtures at elevated pressures, 2023, Fuel
  • Auto-ignition and detonation of n-butanol and toluene reference fuel blends (TRF), 2021, Combustion and Flame
  • An experimental and kinetic modeling study of the ignition delay and heat release characteristics of a five component gasoline surrogate and its blends with iso-butanol within a rapid compression machine, 2021, International Journal of Chemical Kinetics

Frequent co-authors in Alison S. Tomlin's work include Christian A. Michelbach, Scott Wiseman, Hu Li, Marwaan Al-Khafaji, and Junfeng Yang.

Alison S. Tomlin received the Fellow of the Combustion Institute award in 2018 for work involving the development and application of mechanism reduction, sensitivity analysis, and uncertainty quantification in combustion models.

Best Publications

  • Analysis of Kinetic Reaction Mechanisms

    Tamás Turányi;Alison S. Tomlin

  • Chapter 4 Mathematical tools for the construction, investigation and reduction of combustion mechanisms

    Alison S. Tomlin;Alison S. Tomlin;Tamás Turányi;Tamás Turányi;Michael J. Pilling;Michael J. Pilling

  • GUI-HDMR - A software tool for global sensitivity analysis of complex models

    T. Ziehn;A. S. Tomlin

  • On the error of the quasi-steady-state approximation

    T. Turanyi;A. S. Tomlin;M. J. Pilling

  • Mechanism reduction for the oscillatory oxidation of hydrogen; Sensitivity and quasi-steady-state analyses

    Alison S. Tomlin;Michael J. Pilling;Tamás Turányi;John H. Merkin

  • Uncertainty driven theoretical kinetics studies for CH3OH ignition: HO2 + CH3OH and O2 + CH3OH

    Stephen J. Klippenstein;Lawrence B. Harding;Michael J. Davis;Alison S. Tomlin

  • Flow field measurements in the proximity of an urban intersection in London, UK

    A. Dobre;S. J. Arnold;S. J. Arnold;R. J. Smalley;J. W. D. Boddy

  • An overview of the potential environmental impacts of large-scale microalgae cultivation

    Philippa K. Usher;Andrew B. Ross;Miller Alonso Camargo-Valero;Alison S. Tomlin

  • Improved near surface wind speed predictions using Gaussian process regression combined with numerical weather predictions and observed meteorological data

    Victoria Hoolohan;Alison S. Tomlin;Timothy Cockerill

  • The role of sensitivity and uncertainty analysis in combustion modelling

    Alison S. Tomlin

  • A global sensitivity study of sulfur chemistry in a premixed methane flame model using HDMR

    T. Ziehn;A. S. Tomlin

  • Introduction to the DAPPLE Air Pollution Project.

    S.J. Arnold;H. ApSimon;J. Barlow;S. Belcher

  • The effect of lumping and expanding on kinetic differential equations

    János Tóth;Genyuan Li;Herschel Rabitz;Alison S. Tomlin

  • Estimating Aerodynamic Parameters of Urban-Like Surfaces with Heterogeneous Building Heights

    J. T. Millward-Hopkins;A. S. Tomlin;L. Ma;D. Ingham

  • A systematic lumping approach for the reduction of comprehensive kinetic models

    H. Huang;M. Fairweather;J.F. Griffiths;A.S. Tomlin

  • Improvement of the modeling of the low-temperature oxidation of n-butane: study of the primary reactions.

    Maximilien Cord;Baptiste Sirjean;René Fournet;Alison Tomlin

  • Mathematical Tools for the Construction, Investigation and Reduction of Combustion Mechanisms

    A. S. Tomlin;T. Turanyi;M. J. Pilling

  • A boundary layer scaling technique for estimating near-surface wind energy using numerical weather prediction and wind map data

    D.J. Allen;A.S. Tomlin;C.S.E. Bale;A. Skea

  • Theoretical validation of chemical kinetic mechanisms: combustion of methanol.

    Rex T. Skodje;Alison S. Tomlin;Stephen J. Klippenstein;Lawrence B. Harding

  • Significance of the HO2 + CO reaction during the combustion of CO + H2 mixtures at high pressures

    G. Mittal;C.J. Sung;M. Fairweather;A.S. Tomlin

Frequent Co-Authors

Michael J. Pilling
Michael J. Pilling University of Leeds
Janet F. Barlow
Janet F. Barlow University of Reading
Martin Berzins
Martin Berzins University of Utah
John Griffiths
John Griffiths University of Leeds
Alan Robins
Alan Robins University of Surrey
Dudley E. Shallcross
Dudley E. Shallcross University of Bristol
Dwayne E. Heard
Dwayne E. Heard University of Leeds
Frédérique Battin-Leclerc
Frédérique Battin-Leclerc University of Lorraine

If you think any of the details on this page are incorrect, let us know.

Report an issue

We appreciate your kind effort to assist us to improve this page, it would be helpful providing us with as much detail as possible in the text box below:

Best Scientists Citing Alison S. Tomlin

Trending Scientists