時(shí)間:2023年9月6日
地點(diǎn):學(xué)術(shù)會(huì)議區(qū)W201
邀請(qǐng)全球知名科學(xué)家介紹DNA存儲(chǔ)、納米毒理學(xué)等前沿科學(xué)技術(shù),分享球差電鏡、微型化雙光子顯微鏡等高端儀器的研究進(jìn)展,同時(shí)就質(zhì)譜法和核磁共振法等研究生物大分子結(jié)構(gòu)及功能、新型分離介質(zhì)制備及蛋白藥物、疫苗純化等最新應(yīng)用進(jìn)行探討和展望。
Paul Westerhoff
教授, 美國(guó)亞利桑那州立大學(xué)
報(bào)告題目:Analytical Strategies to Assess PFAS Removal and Lifecycle Fate during Adsorption or Transformative Water Treatment Processes
報(bào)告摘要
Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) occur in ground and surface water sources across the globe, and proposed drinking water regulations are driving PFAS treatment technology development and implementation. This presentation will first address current treatment technologies, which utilize adsorption (liquid to solid phase transformation), membranes (liquid to liquid separations) or transformative (oxidation or reduction) processes. Examples will be provided how treatment process efficiencies for “real waters” and how the processes challenge analytical methods. Second, the presentation addresses end-of-life for residuals (e.g., activated carbon) that contains PFAS, which will require incineration. Tracking PFAS during incineration requires unique analytical approaches to track fluorinated aqueous, gaseous and solid-phase species. Overall, the presentation will demonstrate how to match PFAS analytical strategies to PFAS drinking water treatment processes.
個(gè)人簡(jiǎn)介
Dr. Paul Westerhoff is a Regents Professor and Fulton Chair of Environmental Engineering in the School of Sustainable Engineering and the Built Environment at Arizona State University. Since joining ASU he has held various administrative positions. After serving as the Civil and Environmental Engineering Department Chair he was the Founding Director for the School of Sustainable Engineering and the Built Environment, and served later as Associate & Vice Dean of Research in Engineering and ASU Vice Provost for Academic Programming. Dr. Westerhoff is the Deputy Director of a NSF ERC for Nanotechnology Enabled Water Treatment and co-Deputy Director of the NSF STC Science and Technologies for Phosphorus Sustainability Center. His research group addresses questions related to What pollutants exist in the environment? If they occur, do they matter? If they occur and matter, what do we do to address them? with a focus on pollutants in natural and engineered water systems. He has over 400 journal publications (H-index>100) and multiple patents. He is the recipient of the 2020 A.P. Black award, 2019 NWRI Clarke Prize, 2015 ASU Outstanding Doctoral Mentor, 2013 ARCADIS/AEESP Frontier in Research Award, and 2006 Paul L. Busch Award. He was elected to the National Academy of Engineering in 2023.