In 1928, Carafoli returned to Bucharest, where he joined the faculty at the Polytechnic University, and founded the Aerodynamics chair; later in 1936 he was promoted to full professor. It was here that he built the first wind tunnel in South-Eastern Europe, and elaborated some of the theory on which calculations of wing profiles of supersonic aircraft are based.[1]
In 1948, he was elected to the Romanian Academy. In 1949 he became director of the Institute of Applied Mechanics of the academy.
Carafoli was President of the International Astronautical Federation from 1968 to 1970.[1][3] In 1971, he reorganized, along with Henri Coandă, the Department of Aeronautical Engineering of the Polytechnic University of Bucharest, spinning it off from the Department of Mechanical Engineering.
Carafoli was awarded the Louis Breguet Prize (Paris, 1927), the Gauss Medal, and the Apollo 11 Medal (1971).
Selected publications
Carafoli, Elie (1932). Recherches expérimentales sur les ailes monoplanes (exécutées à l'Institut aérotechnique de Saint-Cyr). Paris: E. Blondel La Rougery. OCLC6705912.