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Dr. Ching-Hua Huang has been a faculty member in the School of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Georgia Institute of Technology since 2000. She received her B.S. degree in Chemistry from National Taiwan University in 1990, and M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in Environmental Engineering and Chemistry from Johns Hopkins University in 1993 and 1997, respectively. She was a postdoctoral researcher at the University of California-Berkeley between 1997 and 1999.
Dr. Huang has been actively involved in research on the environmental fate of emerging contaminants such as endocrine disruptors, pharmaceutical pollutants and disinfection by-products. Her research and teaching interests are in the area of environmental chemistry; topics include (i) transformation and fate of emerging contaminants in natural and engineered water systems, (ii) interfacial reactions of pollutants with natural minerals and novel nanomaterials, (iii) chemistry of emerging disinfection by-products, (iv) fundamental reaction activity, kinetics and mechanisms of environmental pollutants, and (v) application of novel chromatographic, immunochemical and mass spectrometric techniques for emerging contaminants.
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