Shout out to the AWWA-WEF student chapter, Environmental Engineering Club, and Biosystems Engineering clubs for their work on a lake-shore cleanup project last Sunday. Looks like they got a lot done (some photos are "before and after"). And it looks like they might have had fun!
Check out our new article published in the Water Research Journal. Influence of Zwitterionic Amphiphilic Copolymers on Heterogeneous Gyps... https://t.co/meBCP6yDvi
EEES is super happy to share that this year’s recipient of the CECAS Junior Faculty Award for Excellence in Teaching is EEES faculty member, Dr. Emily Scribner.
https://t.co/aXtv4oQE1y
@ClemsonUniv@ClemsonCECAS
To help restore the preeminence of starting pitchers, should MLB put a runner on base in each inning before seventh if starter is pulled? (Two runners if on third pitcher?) @Buster_ESPN@CTSchwink#bleachertweets
You may have heard of "direct potable reuse." Stoked to share our recent Water Research article on ideas for what we might call "direct hydroponic reuse" with anaerobic membrane bioreactors as a key step. https://t.co/wyeQeqvAdL
National Teaching Assistant Award awarded to EEES Graduate Students Jack Horvath and Max Gordon, MS candidates in Hydrogeology. Congrats!
https://t.co/acr9KRGGw1
@ClemsonUniv@ClemsonCECAS@CUGradSchool
One of the cool things about our department is the Nuclear Environmental Engineering and Science group. They are doing great things to train the workforce for environmental safety in all things nuclear and radioactive. https://t.co/4GuUJ8C7Du
Excited to have Dr. Catherine Peters @123catherinep presenting our School seminar today. Excellent information about how we can store hydrogen to make it a more viable energy carrier in our economy.
KB-1 stands for "kick butt - 1" because this consortium of microbes degraded TCE to ethene quickly. Named after a little kick-butt truck that Elizabeth Edwards owned at the time. Gotta love that.
A few years ago we shared the rumor that wastewater treatment plants smell like turkey after thanksgiving. Kudos to @watercrunch for produced an episode of The Outfall Podcast to explore it further. And thanks to my kids for helping with the experiment! https://t.co/N0RJ32eB4W
Great start of our session on ‘Nano for energy, water infrastructures, and environment’ by a super thought provoking Keynote speech by @jinyong_liu ! @susnanotech
Caye Drapcho sharing data on capturing carbon with algae, which are fed to mussels to create shells, which are good for sequestering carbon in cement. Brilliant! @ClemsonCECAS@ClemsonUniv
Stoked that Weiming Qi's paper was selected as an "Editor's Choice" article for the Journal of Environmental Engineering. Congrats Weiming! https://t.co/Ubpa7rF2oz @ASCE_JEE@ASCE_EWRI@ClemsonEEES