The duo were beaten in straight sets 7-5 and 6-2 by Serbian Nenad Zimonjic and his Australian partner Samantha Stosur.
The duo had previously beaten British partners Neal Skupski and Naomi Broadi in straight sets 6-4, 6-3 during their quarter final match on Friday.
Earlier, Aisam and his Indian mens doubles partner Roahan Bopanna were dumped out in the second round.
Quick-fire Kvitova crushes Bouchard to win Wimbledon title
Petra Kvitova stormed to her second Wimbledon title in the shortest women's final since 1983 as the Czech sixth seed crushed Canada's Eugenie Bouchard 6-3, 6-0 on Saturday.
Kvitova, who first won Wimbledon in 2011, took just 55 minutes to end her three-year wait for a second Grand Slam crown, leaving shell-shocked world number 13 Bouchard helpless to repel a brutal barrage of 28 winners and four aces on Centre Court.
Playing in her first Grand Slam final since her maiden triumph at Wimbledon, the 24-year-old Kvitova produced a brilliant display of power-hitting to secure the 12th career title.
Fittingly, Kvitova's breathtaking performance came in front of her childhood hero Martina Navratilova, whose 54-minute win against Andrea Jaeger 31 years ago was the last Wimbledon final to take less time than this ruthless demolition.
"I had great tactics from my coach, he always knows how I need to play," Kvitova said. "I can't say it's more special but after three years to be back here with the trophy is so special."
After struggling to cope with the fame and increased expectations that came with her first Wimbledon triumph, Kvitova has finally recaptured the thrilling form that brought her that breakthrough success.
The left-hander dropped just one set in her seven matches en route to lifting the Venus Rosewater dish for the second time and will rise to fourth in the world rankings next week.
While Kvitova celebrated, Bouchard, the youngest finalist at a major since Caroline Wozniacki in 2009, was left to lick her wounds after a chastening defeat in her first Grand Slam final.
The photogenic and fiercely competitive Bouchard, named after Princess Eugenie by her royalty-obsessed mother, has been widely compared to Maria Sharapova and this was supposed to be her coronation as the queen of Wimbledon.
Bu instead, with her regal namesake watching from the Royal Box, the 20-year-old was swept away and now shares with Sharapova the unwanted distinction of being thrashed by Kvitova in a Wimbledon final.
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C'mon - they put up a fight throughout their stint at this year's wimbledon. they weren't exactly 'dumped' or 'crashed out! Does the person writing this article even know much about tennis? :s