Author Archive

New Editorial Board member for ESWRT: Professor Eveline Volcke (Ghent University, Belgium)

We are delighted to announce that Professor Eveline Volcke (Ghent University, Belgium) has joined the Environmental Science: Water Research & Technology team as an Editorial Board member.

Eveline Volcke is a Professor at Ghent University, Belgium. Her ‘Biosystems Control (BioCo)’ research group focuses on efficient and sustainable process design and control. Eveline has a specific expertise in biological wastewater treatment. She aims at process optimization through physical-based modelling and simulation, data treatment techniques and experimental studies. In doing so, she profits from a chemical engineering background, a PhD in environmental technology, a strong international network, e.g. as a Fellow of the International Water Association (IWA), and 20+ years of research experience.

Read Eveline’s latest Perspective on resource recovery and wastewater treatment modelling

Read more of Eveline’s work here

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Drinking water oxidation and disinfection processes: Themed Issue in Environmental Science: Water Research & Technology

Environmental Science: Water Research & Technology (ESWRT) seeks your high-impact research for our upcoming Themed Issue on Drinking water oxidation and disinfection processes.

Guest Edited by Tom Bond (University of Surrey), Wenhai Chu (Tongji University), Maria José Farré (ICRA Catalan Institute for Water Research) and Urs von Gunten (EAWAG), this interdisciplinary issue will feature the latest advances in chemical, toxicological, epidemiological, microbiological, public health and engineering aspects of drinking water oxidation and disinfection processes. A wide range of contributions are encouraged, including investigation of the formation, impacts and control of transformation products and disinfection byproducts associated with the use of chlorine, chloramines, chlorine dioxide, ozone, ferrate and advanced oxidation processes.

Submissions for this Themed Issue are due by 31st March 2020 – if you would like to submit to this Themed Issue, please contact the Environmental Science: Water Research & Technology Editorial Office at eswater-rsc@rsc.org to let us know.

 

 

 

 

 

 


Guest Editors (Left to Right)
: Tom Bond (University of Surrey), Wenhai Chu (Tongji University), Maria José Farré (ICRA Catalan Institute for Water Research) and Urs von Gunten (EAWAG)

Click here to return to the journal homepage

 

 

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Emerging Investigator Series – Olya Keen

Dr. Olya Keen received her B.S. and M.S. degrees in civil and environmental engineering from the University of South Florida in 2008, and her Ph.D. from the University of Colorado at Boulder in 2012.  She has been an Assistant Professor in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte since 2013.  Her research interests are contaminants of emerging concern, UV-based treatment technologies, especially advanced oxidation, and water reuse.

Read her Emerging Investigator article “Transformation of common antibiotics during water disinfection with chlorine and formation of antibacterially active products” and read more about him in the interview below:

Your recent Emerging Investigator Series paper focuses on Transformation of common antibiotics during water disinfection with chlorine and formation of antibacterially active products. How has your research evolved from your first article to this most recent article?

My very first article was on biodegradability of the products of carbamazepine (a pharmaceutical) after advanced oxidation.  Essentially, my work continues to focus on the transformation products of pharmaceuticals.  Trace pollutants of emerging concern, and especially pharmaceuticals, sparked my interest when I learned about them as an undergraduate student.  When I decided to get a PhD, my aim was specifically to research this topic.  I haven’t lost my interest in it since.  There is still a lot to learn about the fate of pharmaceuticals and their transformation products in water and wastewater treatment processes, their human and environmental health effects at trace levels, and whether and how to control their concentrations in water resources.  While this paper is very close in the topic to my first paper, I have since studied a number of topics with the ultimate goal to develop a strategy for keeping pharmaceuticals from water resources.  I have investigated the impacts of hospital wastewater on antibiotics and antibiotic resistance genes in wastewater collection systems, have researched how the disposal of pharmaceuticals into solid waste from households and hospitals can impact water resources via landfill leachate, and examined the fate of some pharmaceuticals in environmental buffers used in potable water reuse.  I have also been delving into other categories of contaminants of emerging concern (plasticizers, flame retardants, algal toxins, etc.) with some of my ongoing research.

What aspect of your work are you most excited about at the moment?

I am looking forward to continuing my work with the antibiotic transformation products we identified in this most recent publication and in some of the earlier papers.  We plan to study their occurrence in full-scale treatment processes and their role in the development of antibiotic resistance.

In your opinion, what are the most important questions to be asked/answered in this field of research?

I think one of the most concerning pharmaceutical classes in water resources is antibiotics.  More and more evidence comes out that environmental levels of antibiotics play a role in antibiotic resistance development.  The most urgent question is how to control the release of antimicrobial substances (non-matabolized fraction of antibiotics, antibacterial substances in soaps, etc.) into the environment in a way that is economical to wastewater treatment plants and that doesn’t generate new substances of concern, e.g. antibiotic transformation products.

What do you find most challenging about your research?

The part of my research that involves work with transformation products is challenging for a number of reasons.  Their definitive identification, and determining whether we should be concerned about them, is not an easy process and involves significant analytical research.  Often projects don’t have a sufficient budget or a timeline for research as thorough as I would like it to be.

In which upcoming conferences or events may our readers meet you?

I am planning to attend IUVA 2020 conference in Orlando and the next AEESP conference in 2021.  I also periodically attend national ACS meetings.

How do you spend your spare time?

I have a toddler, so I only daydream about spare time.  I do enjoy spending time with my family.  If I had a bit more spare time, I would use it to travel the world, read, and pursue painting.

Which profession would you choose if you were not a scientist?

I have a bit of an idealistic view of sustainable and organic farm living, and I sometime picture myself doing that.  This is what my ancestors did for generations.  My parents farmed in addition to their jobs when I was growing up, and now they are doing it full time in retirement.  It amazes me, how little waste they generate by living the way they do and the kind of life skills they have.  I hope to eventually teach my kid the knowledge of the traditional ways to make our own food and to live a truly low-impact and sustainable existence.

Can you share one piece of career-related advice or wisdom with other early career scientists?

Have one day a week for which you do not schedule any classes or meetings.  It can be difficult to maintain focus on a paper or a proposal when the whole day is fractionated by various short-duration items.  Creative thinking on a topic takes getting immersed into it for hours, chasing a thought and then the next thought that it leads to, and so on.  Try to schedule most of the meetings on a single day.  That day will be draining, but if split into several days, it will result in several draining days with seemingly nothing accomplished.  Wise time management is a must, as the to-do list is never cleared, and it is easy to get overwhelmed and to feel like there is never any time to get things done no matter how long the hours.

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Green Technologies for Sustainable Water (GTSW) 2019

Ho Chi Minh City, formerly known as Sai Gon, is the biggest city in the south of Vietnam. It was built on Sai Gon River and considered as the Pearl of the Orient during French colonial time. This city, with its essential French colonial character, has enough to draw your attention. The presence of colonial villas, wide avenues, and a lively café society will remind you of the days of French dominance. Over the past 10 years, Ho Chi Minh City has experienced a spectacular change in its cityscape. The once low-rise landscape of the city’s central area, district 1, is now marked with shining skyscrapers including high-rise apartments, international hotels, and companies. Ho Chi Minh City is also the cultural center and economic capital of the country. The city with its teeming metropolis mingled with the elegance of ancient culture is the best representation for the whole of Vietnam.

With its charm, Ho Chi Minh City is a wonderful and the most suitable place for organizing the second Green Technologies for Sustainable Water (GTSW 2019), as the first conference (GTSW 2017) was successfully organized in Ha Noi by the Vietnam-Japan University. This time, GTSW 2019 is hosted and organized by Ho Chi Minh City University of Technology (HCMUT), University of Technology Sydney (UTS), Institute for Environment and Resources (IER), Vietnam Japan University, CARE-RESCIF, Tianjin Chengjian University, and Tianjin Polytechnic University. GWST 2019 will also include the 4th International Membrane Bioreactor and Scientific Writing Workshops.

DOWNLOAD: GTSW 2019 Call for Papers (PDF)

Important Dates

Abstract submission deadline   June 30, 2019

Abstract acceptance notice       July 15, 2019

Early bird registration                 July 30, 2019

Conference                                  Dec 1-5, 2019

 

Conference Topics

GTSW-2019 will cover the latest scientific & technological developments for:

  • Wastewater treatment and reuse
  • Resource recovery from wastewater
  • Control of greenhouse gas emissions from wastewater treatment processes
  • Water resourcemanagement and water supply
  • Nanotechnology for water treatment
  • Advanced analytical methods for water and wastewater
  • Disruptive technologies and applications for water resource treatment and management

For more information about the conference, check out the even website here http://gtsw2019.hcmut.edu.vn/

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