Research Projects
Below is a list of currently active and past reseach projects led by the Shah lab group. These research projects are an exciting way for us to bring new scientific discoveries to the forfront of our field that we hope impact people’s lives and the natural world around us.
Current Projects
This NSF-funded project evaluates how different indirect photochemical pathways influence COS and CS2 formation in ocean and freshwaters during sunlight photolysis.
This NSF-funded interdisciplinary project aims to develop the fundamental knowledge necessary to enable an innovative and integrated bio- and physico-chemical process that can effectively recover critical metals from municipal solid waste (MSW) landfills within associated leachates.
This project examines the ability for point-of-use filter media to remove and react with free chlorine and chloramines and how this may affect water quality downstream.
Past Projects
This NSF-funded project examined the kinetics and mechanisms of polyamide monomer degradation during chlorination and chloramination and evaluated similar processes on flat-sheet polyamide membranes.
This Water Research Foundation (WRF)-funded project, in collaboration with numerous water utilties, evaluated how plastic pipes used in distribution systems formed contaminants readily found in such systems after wildfires.
This Showalter Research Trust-funded project evaluated the formation and sorption of trihalomethanes when chlorinated water was exposed to typical household plastic pipes.