Research
- An interdisciplinary research team led by a 麻豆免费版下载 professor has won a major NSF award to help "crack the olfactory code."
- U.S. Environmental Protection Agency awards professor Shelly Miller, professor in the Environmental Engineering Program, and her team $1 million to evaluate the impacts of climate change, including increased wildfires, on indoor air quality and health.
- Environmental engineer Mark Hernandez among those turning their focus to ecosystems associated with the built environment.
- This year, the College of Engineering and Applied Science has an unprecedented number of National Science Foundation CAREER award winners, with seven junior faculty earning this prestigious honor. Two of them 鈥 assistant professors Shideh
- Oil and gas operations in the United States produce about 21 billion barrels of wastewater per year. The saltiness of the water and the organic contaminants it contains have traditionally made treatment difficult and expensive.Engineers at the
- A women-led group of CU-Boulder engineering faculty will spend the next year studying how to make community infrastructure more resilient, thanks to an exploratory grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF). The grant is part of the NSF鈥檚
- [video:https://youtu.be/RMlIEyHjDB0]Karl Linden, Helen and Huber Croft Professor of Environmental Engineering, was recently named WateReuse Person of the Year by the WateReuse Association at their annual award ceremony in Dallas.According to the
- A CU-Boulder team led by Zhiyong 鈥淛ason鈥 Ren, associate professor in the Department of Civil, Environmental and Architectural Engineering, was recently awarded first place in the National Science Foundation鈥檚 Innovation Corps Program, which works
- Congratulations to environmental engineering Professor R. Scott Summers and his team! Continuing its commitment to improving America鈥檚 drinking water, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) on Sept. 9 announced more than $8 million in grants
- A study by three CU-Boulder professors, including Shideh Dashti, assistant professor of civil, environmental and architectural engineering, has shown that Twitter can be a valuable tool for assessing damage to infrastructure after a natural