Chong Qiu, Assistant Professor of Chemistry, Earns National Science Foundation’s Early Career Award; Joins Recipients from Cornell, Dartmouth, Harvard, and NYU
Chong Qiu, Assistant Professor of Chemistry, Earns National Science Foundation’s Early Career Award; Joins Recipients from Cornell, Dartmouth, Harvard, and NYU
WEST HAVEN, Conn.--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- University of New Haven chemistry professor Chong Qiu, Ph.D., has been awarded a five-year, almost $700,000 National Science Foundation (NSF) Early Career Award for his groundbreaking research on aerosols – tiny particles suspended in the air – in the atmosphere. Qiu is the first University of New Haven faculty member to receive this National Science Foundation award.
Qiu will use the funding to advance his research that has the potential to shape understanding of the impact of air quality on climate change, weather forecasting, and human health.
“National Science Foundation Early Career Awards are coveted by the very best faculty at the very best universities,” said Ron Harichandran, Ph.D., dean of the University’s Tagliatela College of Engineering, noting that Qiu’s fellow recipients of NSF’s early career award this year are professors at Cornell, Dartmouth, Harvard and NYU. “This prestigious award is a great honor for Dr. Qiu and the University of New Haven.”
Qiu’s research is investigating chemicals, such as amines – nitrogen-containing organic compounds that are derived from ammonia – that Qiu said were previously thought not to have a significant impact on the atmosphere.
“We recently discovered that reactions of amines play an important role in the formation and transformation of atmospheric aerosols,” Qiu said. “We need to understand how the presence of amines in the particle phase affect aerosol properties,” Qiu said.
For the past two years, Qiu has worked with undergraduate and graduate students on this research. Members of his research team also have visited area high schools and middle schools to teach students how to collect micrometeorites from rainwater using tools designed from plumbing parts.
Qiu’s research program will feature:
- Three to four graduate students and three to eight undergraduate students and undergraduate interns;
- Guest lectures regarding atmospheric chemistry;
- Developing and building the project’s instrumentation. Collaborating with Joseph Levert, University of New Haven associate professor of mechanical engineering, Qiu created a five-year plan in which each year a team of engineering majors as part of their senior project will continue the development of the project’s instrumentation
- A summer academy for high school students in the region
- Development of a K-12 STEM pipeline, getting students of all levels participating in some aspect of the research
“We need to continue to encourage talented students to pursue STEM fields,” Qiu said. “And I hope we can galvanize support for science and discovery.”
About the University of New Haven
The University of New Haven, founded on the Yale campus in 1920, is a private, coeducational university situated on the coast of southern New England. It’s a diverse and vibrant community of more than 7,000 students with campuses around the country and around the world.
Within its colleges and schools, students immerse themselves in a transformative, career-focused education across the liberal arts and sciences, fine arts, business, engineering, public safety and public service. More than 100 academic programs are offered, all grounded in a long-standing commitment to collaborative, interdisciplinary, project-based learning. www.newhaven.edu
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Source: University of New Haven