Lienhard joined the
mechanical engineering faculty of the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1988, and he remained on the faculty until his retirement in 2025. Lienhard's initial research at MIT focused on cooling by liquid jet impingement. This work included fundamental
convection problems, droplet splattering, free-surface turbulence interactions, and pattern formation in the
hydraulic jump. The thin
boundary layer at a jet's
stagnation point also provided a means of high-
heat-flux engineering. In 1993, Lienhard's group reported a steady-state heat flux of ≈40 kW/cm2 under a high-speed water jet. They later extended this approach to arrays of jets, allowing larger areas to be cooled at high flux. In 1998, they used an array of water jets at 46 m/s to remove 1.7 kW/cm2 by convection alone over areas of several cm2. In the 2000s, Lienhard refocused his research on water scarcity and clean water supply, particularly on desalination technologies. He later wrote that he made this shift after reading about worldwide water scarcity and realizing that his background in transport phenomena could be applied to water purification. His group's desalination research has included topics such as energy efficiency, forward and
reverse osmosis,
nanofiltration, brine management,
membrane distillation, humidification-dehumidification, and
electrodialysis. The seawater thermophysical property correlations developed by his group have been widely cited by other researchers. Lienhard has written hundreds of peer-reviewed research publications and has been issued more than 40 US patents. The patents have supported start-up companies from Lienhard's research group, one of which, Gradiant Corporation, grew to more than $1 billion valuation in 2023. Lienhard helped launch several large-scale research programs at MIT. He was the founding director of the Center for Clean Water and Clean Energy (2008–2017), a research collaboration with
King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals (KFUPM) involving four dozen faculty members at KFUPM and MIT. He was also the founding director of the Ibn Khaldun Fellowship program for Saudi Arabian Women, which each year brings several women to MIT for postdoctoral research collaborations. In 2014, Lienhard founded the Abdul Latif Jameel Water and Food Systems Lab (J-WAFS), and he served as J-WAFS director until 2025. J-WAFS supports research by MIT faculty on water and food to address the needs of a rapidly growing population on a changing planet. Under Lienhard's leadership, J-WAFS funded more than 100 research and commercialization projects distributed across MIT's schools. He and his father have collaborated on the heat transfer book for decades. In 2001, they made the decision to distribute the work primarily as a free
ebook, which has since been downloaded hundreds of thousands of times across the world, according to interviews with Lienhard. Lienhard has also received awards for his teaching ==Awards and honors==