- Ph.D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- M.S., University of Washington
- B.A., Colby College
BIO
Dr. Britt A. Holmén (Professor, Civil & Environmental Engineering) has over 15 years of experience measuring air pollutants. She directs the Transportation Air Quality Laboratory (TAQ Lab) at ¶¶Òõ̽̽ where research on ultrafine particle and gas-phase emissions from vehicles is conducted to elucidate their effects on human and environmental health. She designed the TOTEMS system to quantify real-world vehicle tailpipe emissions and pioneered efforts to quantify particle emissions from alternative vehicles using these techniques. Current TAQ Lab research foci include real-world hybrid-electric vehicle and biodiesel fuel effects on tailpipe emissions of particles and air toxic gases. Prior to joining ¶¶Òõ̽̽ in August 2006, Dr. Holmén was on the Civil & Environmental Engineering faculty at the University of Connecticut for five years where she conducted research on real-world hybrid transit bus particle emissions as well as fugitive emissions from agriculture sources. Her past appointments include research and adjunct faculty positions at the University of California Davis, where her interests in air pollution and vehicle emissions research evolved beyond her academic training in water/solid interfacial chemistry.
Courses
- CE 132 (SU) – Environmental Systems
- CE 250 – Environmental Organic Chemistry
- CE 253 - Transportation and Air Quality
- CE 254 - Analytical Practice for Environmental Scientists & Engineers
- ENGR 101 – Engineering Communications
Area(s) of expertise
Particle Interface Chemistry, Airborne Particle Emissions & Processes, Herbicide Gas/Particle Partitioning, Lidar Remote Sensing, Transportation & Air Quality, Nonpoint Source Emissions
Bio
Dr. Britt A. Holmén (Professor, Civil & Environmental Engineering) has over 15 years of experience measuring air pollutants. She directs the Transportation Air Quality Laboratory (TAQ Lab) at ¶¶Òõ̽̽ where research on ultrafine particle and gas-phase emissions from vehicles is conducted to elucidate their effects on human and environmental health. She designed the TOTEMS system to quantify real-world vehicle tailpipe emissions and pioneered efforts to quantify particle emissions from alternative vehicles using these techniques. Current TAQ Lab research foci include real-world hybrid-electric vehicle and biodiesel fuel effects on tailpipe emissions of particles and air toxic gases. Prior to joining ¶¶Òõ̽̽ in August 2006, Dr. Holmén was on the Civil & Environmental Engineering faculty at the University of Connecticut for five years where she conducted research on real-world hybrid transit bus particle emissions as well as fugitive emissions from agriculture sources. Her past appointments include research and adjunct faculty positions at the University of California Davis, where her interests in air pollution and vehicle emissions research evolved beyond her academic training in water/solid interfacial chemistry.
Courses
- CE 132 (SU) – Environmental Systems
- CE 250 – Environmental Organic Chemistry
- CE 253 - Transportation and Air Quality
- CE 254 - Analytical Practice for Environmental Scientists & Engineers
- ENGR 101 – Engineering Communications
Areas of Expertise
Particle Interface Chemistry, Airborne Particle Emissions & Processes, Herbicide Gas/Particle Partitioning, Lidar Remote Sensing, Transportation & Air Quality, Nonpoint Source Emissions