Faculty News
- A recent article published in Forbes discusses how researchers at the University of Colorado Boulder are teaming up with tech giant IBM, nonprofit organization The Freshwater Trust (TFT), and sensor provider SweetSense Inc. to pilot blockchain and satellite-connected sensor solutions to track groundwater usage in California.
- “Homes have never been considered an important source of outdoor air pollution and the moment is right to start exploring that,” said EVEN Faculty Marina Vance.
- The National Academy of Engineering (NAE) published a report on the educational and career pathways of engineers in the United States. CEAE Associate Professor Amy Javernick-Will, is a committee member of the NAE panel on the engineering education to workforce continuum and contributed to this report.
- CEAE Department Professors Sherri Cook and Amy Javernick-Willpublished the research they conducted with PhD student Allie Davis on the effectiveness of sanitation systems to meet user priorities. They studied the factors affecting sanitation
- Professor Shelly Miller newest outreach research project is on the health, wellbeing, air and noise pollution and traffic in the Elyria-Swansea community, during the C70 construction project. Check out the Website
- Korak’s research interests are broadly focused on water treatment engineering, spanning municipal drinking water, water reuse and industrial water treatment. A licensed professional engineer in Colorado, she earned her PhD in civil and environmental engineering in 2014 before heading off to work in the Water Treatment Group at the Bureau of Reclamation in Denver.
- Professor Shelly Miller and Jana Milford have each authored a chapter in the new textbook Handbook of Environmental Engineeringwhich was published in August of this year. This textbook offers a comprehensive guide to environmental engineers who
- Dr. Mark Hernandez won a $117,669 grant from ’s Technology Transfer Office (TTO) as part of the first annual Lab Venture Challenge (LVC). He was chosen, along with six other winners, from a pool of fourteen finalists representing the physical sciences and biosciences. Dr. Hernandez was recognized for the admixture he developed that helps mitigate the effects of microbially induced concrete corrosion (MICC).
- EVEN Professor Ben Livneh recently co-authored a chapter in the U.S. Global Change Research Program, Fourth National Climate Assessment (NCA4) which summarizes the impacts of climate change on the United States, now and in the future,