Summer 2011 - School of Engineering
Transcription
Summer 2011 - School of Engineering
NEWSLETTER ISSUE 1:1 SUMMER 2011 DEPARTMENT OF CIVIL + ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING Ashley Martin, E13, assembles a section of the bridge during a ASCE Steel Bridge Team practice session on April 26, 2011. (Credit: Kelvin Ma/Tufts University) SPANNING THE DISTANCE Engineers bridge theory and practice Structural engineers in Tufts’ American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE) chapter spent their senior year designing and constructing bridges—and putting their classroom knowledge to the test in the real world. “A lot of what we do in school is on paper, but there’s nothing like actually making something,” said Justin Binder, E11, co-captain of Tufts ASCE steel bridge team. “The ability to get your hands on some physical steel, there’s sort of nothing like it.” “I think I never really had an idea of the limitations or advantages of working with a material like steel,” said Trevor Sanders, E11, head of the structural design team. “You assume in the classroom, if the calculations say your design is good, then it’s good; but in reality, there are so many more constraints.” In the last weekend of April 2011, students from the steel bridge team, including Trevor, Justin, and co-captain Eric Johnson, E12, traveled to Quebec to participate in the regional steel bridge competition. Continued on page 3 “A lot of what we do in school is on paper, but there’s nothing like actually making something... The ability to get your hands on some physical steel, there’s sort of nothing like it.” IN THIS ISSUE From the Chair.................. 2 Research Highlights.......... 3 Quick Hits......................... 3 Sponsored Talks................ 4 Congratulations to our Graduates................... 5 Alumni Updates................. 6 Alumni and Student Awards Dinner................... 7 FROM THE CHAIR Dear CEE Alumni and Friends, Summer in New England: warm breezes, fireworks on the water, Tufts’ softball, time to reflect…and finish the newsletter! It has been a productive year for the department as we continue to expand our faculty, improve facilities, and educate the next generation of civil and environmental engineers. To strengthen our program in Environmental Health, Professor Elena Naumova joined the department from Tufts University School of Medicine. Dr. Naumova’s area of expertise is biostatistics, and her research interests include the development of analytical tools for disease surveillance, exposure assessment, and environmental epidemiology. Dr. Naumova’s research group will be based in the new the Integrated Laboratory for Computation at 196 Boston Avenue, a collaborative research environment that houses researchers working in such areas as visualization, artificial intelligence, signal processing, statistics, and machine learning. Notables... Associate Professor Laurie Baise was elected to the board of the Seismological Society of America. Professor and Chair Kurt Pennell, Research Assistant Professor Natalie Cápiro, and collaborator Frank Löffler (University of Tennessee) have received funding from SERDP to develop a fundamental understanding of the impacts of in situ remediation technologies on groundwater quality and relevant subsurface processes. Associate Professor David M. Gute was an invited participant at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services meeting to discuss potential revisions to the existing “Strategic Elements for Environmental Justice” document,which sets the agency’s environmental justice goals. Associate Professor Chris Swan and colleagues Angela Bielefeldt (University of Colorado-Boulder) and Kurt Paterson (Michigan Technological University) received the 2010 American Society of Engineering Education’s Best Paper Award for their paper “Measuring the Impacts of Project-Based Service Learning.” 2 In addition, we hired three Research Assistant Professors in the Environmental and Water Resources (EWRE) and Geotechnical and Geoenvironmental Engineering (GGE) groups. Dr. Itza Mendoza-Sanchez investigates abiotic and biotic processes that control the prevention and mitigation of soil and groundwater contamination. Dr. Eric Thompson’s, EG09, research focuses on numerical modeling of soil behavior and methods for incorporating the effects soil response on seismic hazard maps. Dr. David Small studies global hydrologic processes and the environmental impacts of climate change. To help manage our growing department, Laura Sacco has been promoted to administrative assistant, and we welcome Kristen Fratto as staff assistant in the main CEE office. In student news, the ASCE chapter had another active year, which included organizing the CEE Buddy System for incoming majors, hosting the student-faculty dinner and softball game, and winning Tufts’ Engineering Week for the third year in a row. In addition, the Steel Bridge team had a solid showing at the AISC-ASCE northeast regional competition. Special thanks to Dan Valentine, E93, EG95, staff engineer with Simpson Gumpertz & Heger, and to Masoud Sanayei and Lee Minardi, who helped advise the team. Kudos also go to our graduate student award winners, Allison St. Vincent and Karen Koskinski. Allison received an EPA-STAR Graduate Fellowship and a Scholar Award from the Philanthropic Educational Organization to support her research on ultrafine particles in air pollution. Karen received a 2011 Tufts Presidential Award for Citizenship and Public Service for her work on the prevention of schistosomiasis in Ghana. Please feel free to visit us if you’re in the area, and I hope to see you at the Alumni and Student Awards Dinner on Saturday, May 5, 2012. Spanning The Distance Continued from page 1 The annual competition sponsored by the ASCE and the American Institute of Steel Construction challenges student teams to design bridges with a long list of structural requirements and build them on-site at the competition in less than 45 minutes. In the competition, the team’s bridge bent minimally under a load of 2,500 pounds—the weight of a Volkswagen Beetle—which earned them third place in that design category. Overall, the team finished sixth out of thirteen schools, and the real-life lessons will be passed on to next year’s team. “Normally, if you complete an academic assignment, you know it’s good if you get a checkmark on the page; but with this competition, we know our design is good if the bridge doesn’t break. That will be our checkmark,” said Justin. To see a time-lapse video of the steel bridge construction, use your smart phone to scan the QR code. Or go to goo.gl/vsZWO RESEARCH HIGHLIGHTS Breaking Ground: New Environmental Sustainability Laboratory Rendering of the Environmental Sustainability Laboratory One of the most critical threats to current and future clean water supplies is emerging contaminants, specifically engineered nanomaterials, pharmaceuticals and personal care products (PPCPs), and pathogens. To address this need, the department will renovate the existing environmental engineering laboratories to create a centralized, high-quality laboratory space to enhance ongoing and future research programs in environmental sustainability. The department received $1.6 million from the National Science Foundation to create a state-of-the-art Environmental Sustainability Laboratory (ESL) that will support multi-disciplinary experimental and mathematical modeling research to advance the fundamental understanding of the fate, transport and control of emerging contaminants in multi-media—air, water, and soil—environmental environmental systems. The proposed renovation will provide approximately 3,000 square ft. of wet-laboratory space. With supplemental funds from the School of Engineering, the project also creates two graduate student offices and relocates the computer-aided design (CAD) lab. Vaughan Receives Sustainability Innovation Award Master’s candidate Eric Vaughan received one of two honorable mention awards from the Dow Sustainability Innovation Student Challenge for his research project: “A Methodology for Evaluating Coupled Pricing Policies that Stimulate the Agricultural Use of Treated Wastewater.” Vaughan says, “Part of sustainability is managing groundwater resources. If you’re replacing your use of groundwater with wastewater, you’re basically getting more use for every drop of water that you’re pulling out of the ground.” Cholera and Climate Change The research of Ali Akanda and Antarpreet Jutla, recent doctoral recipients (August 2011) in Professor Shafiqul Islam’s research group WE REASoN, was featured in Yale Environment 360 and the Huffington Post. Jutla and Akanda have been working with Islam to develop methods to use remote sensing and climate data to track the coastal plankton blooms that occur before cholera outbreaks. Climate change could exacerbate these plankton blooms, and in turn, the severity of cholera outbreaks. “Although there is no clear understanding of the exact nature of the relationship between cholera and climate,” said Islam, “if climate change leads to more extremes, it will have an impact on cholera.” QUICK HITS Professor Steven Chapra was named a Fellow of the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE). Chapra was also named the ASCE/CEE Faculty Member of the Year Award given to the faculty member whose enthusiasm, dedication, and mentorship best inspires students to pursue their passions. Professor John Durant received a Tufts Community Research Center Award for his involvement in the Community Assessment of Freeway Exposure and Health (CAFEH) study. Professor David Gute received the Multicultural Service Award given by Tufts AS&E Equal Education Opportunity Committee. He was recognized for his work with the Vida Verde Women’s Cleaning Co-Operative in Somerville. Professor Rich Vogel received the John W. Olver Leadership Award in recognition of his “dedicated leadership and outstanding commitment to environmental research and protection of our natural resources.” 3 Sponsored Talks July March Professor Steve Chapra visited South Korea where he gave a keynote address at the Korean Environment Institute’s International Water Symposium on public health engineering. Professor and Chair Kurt Pennell gave a presentation at Brown University’s Superfund Research Program about “Linking Environmental Toxicants to Neurodegenerative Disease: Persistent Organic Pollutants and Engineered Nanomaterials.” May Professor Masoud Sanayei, Professor of the Practice Brian Brenner, Ningyu Zhao, and other colleagues from the Structural Health Monitoring (SHM) project presented their research on bridges in Massachusetts to the 2010 Structures Congress/North American Steel Construction Conference (NASCC) in Florida. Professor and Chair Kurt Pennell delivered a keynote lecture on “Thermal Treatment: Chemical Reactivity and Combined Remedies” at the REMTec Summit conference on advancing the environmental science and collaborating with remediation industry. April Professor Rich Vogel gave the keynote address— “Water Resources Planning in a Changing World”— at the Water Resources Conference at UMass, Amherst. WSSS hosted its second annual interdisciplinary symposium at The Fletcher School: “Water in 2050: The Infrastructure to Get There.” Participants included: Paul Kirshen, Research Leader, Battelle Memorial Institute; Associate Professor David Gute; Annette Huber-Lee, Visiting Scholar. January Professor Luis Dorfmann and Ph.D. student James Kaklamanos presented their research about “Identifying and Modeling Complex Site Response Behavior” at the NSF Civil, Mechanical and Manufacturing Innovation Engineering Research and Innovation Conference in Georgia. November Professor Rich Vogel presented an online seminar titled “Hydromorphology: The Shape of our Water Future” as part of the Consortium of Universities for the Advancement of Hydrologic Science, Inc.’s (CUAHSI) 2010 cyberseminar series. October David Gute presented research about occupational safety and health from the community-based grant “Assessing and Controlling Occupational Risks for Immigrants in Somerville” sponsored by NIOSH. Abriola Named Top American Woman in Science Linda M. Abriola, Dean of the School of Engineering at Tufts University, has been recognized among the top American women in science. Dean Abriola appears in “American Women of Science Since 1900” an encyclopedia focused on 500 of the 20th century’s most notable American women scientists. NEW FACES ELENA NAUMOVA Elena Naumova Professor, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering Director Tufts Initiative for Forecasting and Modeling of Infectious Diseases (InForMID) Faculty Director, Health and the Environment, Tufts Institute of the Environment (TIE) Adjunct Professor, Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy Dr. Naumova’s area of expertise is in methodology development for modeling of transient processes with application in environmental epidemiology, infectious diseases, and public health. Her research on developing innovative analytical and computational tools for monitoring environmentally driven infections and longitudinal studies of growth is funded by NIAID, NIEHS, and EPA. She facilitates utilization of novel data sources, including remote sensing data and satellite imagery for better understanding the nature and etiology of diseases on local and global scales. She applied her theoretical work to studies of infections sensitive to climate variations and extreme weather events. Her research activities span a broad range of research programs in emerging and re-emerging diseases, environmental epidemiology, molecular biology and immunogenetics, nutrition and growth. Dr. Naumova is participating in a number of international projects collaborating with epidemiologists, immunologists, and public health professionals in India, Kenya, Ecuador, Japan, Canada, Russia, and the UK. 4 Congratulations to Our 2010–2011 Graduates Undergraduate Awards Bachelor of Science in Civil Engineering Lindsay Hull was awarded the Max O. Urbahn F.A.I.A. Scholarship from the Society of American Military Engineers (SAME)—New York City Post Jessica L. Perkins was awarded the De Florez Prize in Human Engineering Al-Hillawi, Noor Bialosky, Alec James Binder, Justin Israel Bulman, Alison C. Desouza, Yasmin Lopes Donovan, Brian P. Earle, Bennett Giles Frano, Christopher Edward Gomez Jr., Lawrence Freeman Goodman, Lillian Wagner Greenfield, Anna Hope Gudrais, Laila Lauma Harper, Eric D. Littleton Awards Justin Binder, Lindsay Hull, Jenna Lohmann, George Sam Mason, Jessica Perkins, Meghan Pesch, Katie Reif, Kelly Smith, Jordyn Wolfand, Rhiannon Ervin, Eugene Morgan Cataldo Awards Sarah Boudreau, Caitlin Collins, Zachary Cousens, Robert Keane, Yun Luo, Eric Wilburn Alumni Awards Jennifer L. Edelmann, E01, EG03, received the department’s Distinguished Service Award Charles N. Kroll, E87, EG89, received the department’s Outstanding Achievement Award Master of Science in Civil and Environmental Engineering Alex Bedig: OptiRTC: an internet-based real time remote monitoring, control, and communications platform for environmental resource management applications. Hull, Lindsay Amesbury Mason, George Samuel Dunham Neuhs, Thomas C. Okparaeke, Eberechukwu Ezenne Pesch, Meghan Alexandra Reif, Katie Linnea Sanders, Trevor Theodore Caroline M. Ganley: An assessment of human health risks posed by PBDEs measured in the Massachusetts environment. David Roman: Multivariate models of watershed suspended sediment loads for the eastern United States. Carlo Christopher Jacob: Creating an eccentrically braced frame model for application in seismic performance assessments. Stuti Sharma: A risk assessment of lifetime exposure to arsenic-contaminated groundwater and comparison with urinary bladder cancer incidence rates in northeastern Worcester County and western Middlesex County in central Massachusetts. Peter Moser: Continuous monitoring of the Dowling Hall footbridge. Melissa Ng: Multivariate non-stationary stochastic streamflow modeling. Master of Engineering in Civil and Environmental Engineering Travers, Stefanie Joan Eric J. Pheifer: Structural modeling, analysis and instrumentation of the Maurice J. Tobin Memorial Bridge. John Phelps: Instrumentation, nondestructive testing, and finite element model updating for bridge evaluation. Michael T. Larimore Amenta, Julianne Haley Elsey, John Lovell Fechter, Allison N. Filler, Carolyn Lenor Gregory, Benjamin Lee Leach, Olivia Isabel Morris Lohmann, Jenna Elizabeth Simon, Anna Catherine Smith, Kelly Kathryn Swanson, Catherine Alice Wolfand, Jordyn Michelle Matthew Xavier O’Connor: A two-season analysis of air pollutants in a near highway Boston neighborhood. Erik W. Egleston: The spread of plasticity in high-strength reinforced concrete structural walls with boundary elements. Thomas H. Kelley: University waste minimization practices in a sample of U.S. and Canadian universities. Bachelor of Science in Environmental Engineering Christine H. Sotolongo: Fiber optic redox sensors for in-situ environmental monitoring. Jeffrey B. Trull: Impact of atmospheric mixing conditions on near-highway air pollutant gradients in the early morning. Zhenying Zhang: Nutrient mass balance model for the Great Lakes. 5 ALUMNI UPDATES ’07 Lieutenant Brian L. Mackey, ’96 Lieutenant Commander returned from a two-year assignment in Kandahar, Afghanistan. On Veteran’s Day, Nov. 11, 2010, Lt. Mackey flew the flag “for Professor Brenner and the Tufts American Society of Civil Engineers in thanks for all their support.” He visited Brian Brenner’s bridge design class to present a flag and plaque on March 29, 2011. ’01 Stephanie Gawlak Topping, E01, MS03, and Gerry Topping, E00, MS02, announced the birth of Colin Gill on October 28, 2009. Stephanie is associate director in the Office of Institutional Research and Evaluation at Tufts. Gerry is a project manager for the real estate group at Partners Healthcare. The family resides in Topsfield, Mass. ’99 Jocelynn Hyde Cheng and David Cheng announced the arrival of Charlotte Helena on December 17, 2010. Big brothers Jasper and Henry love their new sister. ’98 Linda Bentley and David Gillespie welcomed their second daughter, Elena, on February 12, 2010. They live in Newton, Mass. ’97 Susan Kehnemui Donnelly and Kevin Donnelly announced the birth of Maxwell James on May 22, 2010. He joins sister Sadie. William Butler is now the commanding officer of the U.S. Navy Underwater Construction Team 1, which has been deployed recently to Haiti, Chile, and the Middle East. ’93 Patrick King has been named vice president and environmental division manager in the Boston office of GEI Consultants. He has more than seventeen years of experience in environmental engineering. ’91 Scott Turner has been hired by Nitsch Engineering in Boston as the new director of planning. He has seventeen years of experience as a project manager and civil engineer. ’88 Rachid Hankour, MS88, PhD91, returned from training and teaching at the Northern Arctic Federal University in Russia. “I had a great time teaching again,” he writes, “even in Russian.” Hankour is vice president and director of lab systems at Geocomp. ’86 June Weintraub, E86, MS95, was appointed to a three-year term on the National Drinking Water Advisory Council, a federal advisory committee that provides advice, information, and recommendations on matters related to the Safe Drinking Water Act. She is a senior epidemiologist at the San Francisco Department of Public Health. ’74 Chris Woodcock has just finished a yearlong term as president of the New England Water Works Association. Woodcock is president of Woodcock & Associates, which provides financial and rate-setting consulting services to water and wastewater agencies throughout the world. ’62 Lewis Watt was honored with the Al Sheriff Award for Excellence in Chapter Advising from Delta Tau Delta International Fraternity. He joined the fraternity as an undergraduate in 1959. Since 1996 he has been involved as an alumni volunteer and is the division vice president for central Pennsylvania. 4 ways to share the events of your life with your classmates 1. Join us each May for the annual CEE Alumni and Student Awards Dinner 2. Email [email protected] 3.Visit Tufts Online Community: www.alumniconnections.com/tufts (go to “Classnotes,” then click on “Submit/Edit a Class Note”) 4. Mail to Class Notes, Alumni Relations, Tufts University, 80 George Street, Medford, MA 02155 The ASCE’s Civil Engineering magazine featured an article by Professor of the Practice Eric Hines and Mysore Ravindra, chairman of LeMessurier Consultants, about the recently completed Wind Technology Testing Center. This facility is the largest of its kind in the world and will play a major role in the emerging American offshore wind industry. (Credit: Chuck Choi) 6 Celebrating the CEE Alumni and Student Awards Dinner Department Chairs past and present (L to R): Chris Swan, Linfield Brown, N. Bruce Hanes, Kurt Pennell, Masoud Sanayei, Lew Edgers, and Stephen Levine Top right: Chair Kurt Pennell and James Kaklamanos, doctoral candidate in Geotechnical and Geoenvironmental Engineering Right Middle: Professor Richard Vogel and Charles N. Kroll, E87, EG89, winner of the department’s Outstanding Achievement Award Jodine Brown, temporary staff assistant and Laura Sacco, Administrative Assistant Left Middle: Anjuliee Mittleman and Rhiannon Ervin doctoral candidates in Environmental and Water Resources Engineering Chair Kurt Pennell with the recipients of the Littleton Awards (L to R): Justin Binder, George Sam Mason, Jessica Perkins, Kelly Smith, Jenna Lohmann, Jordyn Wolfand, Lindsay Hull, Katie Reif, Meghan Pesch, and Rhiannon Ervin 7 NONPROFIT ORG. U.S. POSTAGE PAID BOSTON, MA PERMIT NO. 1161 Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering 113 Anderson Hall 200 College Avenue Medford, MA 02155 Jordyn Wolfand, E11, examines a tube of sand used in her experiment in the nanotech laboratory at the SciTech building on Monday, March 28, 2011. As a Summer Scholar in the lab of Kurt Pennell, professor and chair of civil and environmental engineering, Jordyn explored possible links between PCB exposure and Parkinson’s disease. Her senior thesis focused on the way nanoparticles of a carbon configuration called C-60, increasingly used in industry, move through soil. (Credit: Alonso Nichols/Tufts University)