Research
- 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’s
- [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 “Jason” Ren, associate professor in the Department of Civil, Environmental and Architectural Engineering, was recently awarded first place in the National Science Foundation’s Innovation Corps Program, which works
- Congratulations to environmental engineering Professor R. Scott Summers and his team! Continuing its commitment to improving America’s 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
- The ongoing dry conditions due to lower summer (Jun to Sep) monsoon rainfall in India has left scientists and academics alike to discover which weather patterns and conditions work to suppress the annual monsoon and result in rainfall shortages in
- Professor Matthew Hallowell was recently awarded a Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) program award from the National Science Foundation for "Predictive Modeling of Construction Injuries in Complex Environments." The research objective
- The wild and dramatic cascade of ice into the ocean from Alaska’s Columbia Glacier, an iconic glacier featured in the documentary “Chasing Ice” and one of the fastest moving glaciers in the world, will cease around 2020, according to a study by the
- Building life-cycle phases considered for assessing hazard resistance and environmental impacts. Click image to view. CEAE professor Abbie Liel and her team have been awarded a $225,000 grant from the National Science Foundation's Civil
- Flow processes investigated through full-scale field tests, soil tank tests, and numerical simulations of soil-borehole thermal energy storage systems. Click image to view larger. CEAE professor John McCartney and Co-PI Adam Reed (Law) received $1.