Robert Gerard Wilhelm (born June 27, 1960) is an American mechanical engineer.
Wilhelm holds the Kate Foster professorship in Mechanical and Materials Engineering at the University of Nebraska — Lincoln. From 2018 to 2023 he served as the Vice Chancellor for Research and Economic Development at UNL.[1]
Before joining the University of Nebraska — Lincoln, he served as Vice Chancellor for Research and Economic Development at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte.[2] There, he also held a faculty appointment as a professor.[3]
Bob Wilhelm was born June 27, 1960, in Mobile, Alabama. As a child, his family moved to Raleigh, North Carolina, where his father, William J. Wilhelm, earned a PhD in Civil Engineering at North Carolina State University. Their family relocated to Morgantown, West Virginia when William J. Wilhelm joined the West Virginia University civil and environmental engineering faculty. While there, Wilhem's mother, Patricia Zietz, earned a Bachelor of Arts in elementary education and Master of Arts in special education.[4] Later, his father joined Wichita State University as the Dean of the College of Engineering, and their family relocated to Wichita, Kansas.[5]
In 1994, he was recognized with the Young Investigator Award of the National Science Foundation.[7][8] He was a founding faculty member at UNC Charlotte in 5 different PhD programs: Mechanical Engineering, Biology and Biotechnology, Information Technology, Optical Sciences, and Nanoscale Sciences.[9] Wilhelm was a very early and longstanding member of the Precision Engineering and Metrology Group at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte.[10]
Wilhelm's engineering research has addressed metrology and measurement theory for complex mechanical parts,[11] virtual manufacturing for design of manufacturing systems,[12] software, and automation and artificial intelligence for mechanical design and tolerance synthesis.[13]
As a higher education leader he has led university organizations at UNC Charlotte and UNL that envisioned, built and operated innovation campuses with partner companies working collaboratively on the university site.[14] In Charlotte, these organizations included The Charlotte Research Institute Campus at UNC Charlotte and the University Research Park. In Nebraska, Wilhelm led the Nebraska Innovation Campus during his time as vice chancellor at the University of Nebraska - Lincoln.
^Sanford, J.K. (January 1996). Charlotte and UNC Charlotte: Growing Up Together. The University of North Carolina at Charlotte. pp. 303–316. ISBN0945344023.
^Jeffers, W.T. (January 2016). The making of a research university: James H. Woodward and UNC Charlotte, 1989-2005. The University of North Carolina at Charlotte. pp. 51–67. ISBN9780692692448.
^Hermann, M (January 1999). Vision, engineering and science: The founding of the C.C. Cameron Applied Research Center. The University of North Carolina at Charlotte. pp. 91–97. ISBN0945344007.
^Olling GJ, Choi BK, Jerard RB (January 1999). Machining impossible shapes. In IFIP advances in information and communication technology. doi:10.1007/978-0-387-35392-0%7C. ISBN0412846802.
^Wilhelm RG, Lu SC (1 January 1992). Computer methods for tolerance design. World Scientific. ISBN9810210582.
^R. G. Wilhelm, and B. L. Burks, “Reinventing an Innovation Ecology with New Models for Research and Research Parks”, Proceedings of the XXVI IASP World Conference on Science and Technology Parks, Raleigh, NC USA, 2009. Accessed 2/26/2024 from http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/mechengfacpub/723/