Lienhard is the M.D. Anderson Professor of Technology and Culture, emeritus at the
University of Houston. Before he joined the University of Houston in 1980, Lienhard had been a professor at the
University of Kentucky and
Washington State University. His work encompassed film boiling, liquid jets, condensation (with his student Vijay K. Dhir), critical heat flux in various pool-boiling configurations, spinodal limits to liquid superheats, and rapid depressurization, among other topics. His work on critical heat flux included centrifuge measurements of boiling at high gravity. He also developed the dimensionless unit hydrograph, which is widely used to study river run-off. Lienhard coauthored a textbook on statistical thermodynamics with Professor
Chang-lin Tien (1971). He later wrote a textbook on heat transfer (1981) which went through a number of editions (1987, 2001, 2011, 2019), the last three coauthored with his eldest son, John H. Lienhard V. The heat transfer textbook has been available as a free ebook since 2001, one of the earliest textbooks to be distributed in this format. Lienhard created the radio program
The Engines of Our Ingenuity in January 1988. Lienhard's work on
Engines has led to several books, in addition to the radio episodes. The radio program is produced by
KUHF in Houston and carried by National Public Radio. The daily broadcasts of
Engines of Our Ingenuity made Lienhard a sought-after public speaker. Over the three decades after
Engines launched, Lienhard gave dozens of invited lectures each year, eventually totaling more than 1100 major addresses. ==Awards and recognition==