Skip to main content

Research

Graduate student research

Graduate students play an important role in contributing to research projects that have real-world impact. From investigating legacy arsenic in lakes to furthering wastewater treatment innovations to developing landslide risk maps, students in CEE’s Ph.D. program and research-intensive master’s program track have a big impact. In addition to conducting research in collaboration with their faculty adviser, graduate students work with colleagues at partner universities and various agencies and organizations both within the U.S. and abroad.

What types of projects do graduate students work on?

Wastewater treatment innovation

Research area: Environmental Engineering

Graduate student Maxwell Armenta

At West Point Treatment Plant, graduate student Maxwell Armenta observes the fast-settling properties of granular sludge, which is capable of removing nitrogen from wastewater.

Although treated wastewater is full of nutrients, some of these can be harmful to the ecosystem in excess amounts. That’s precisely why graduate student Maxwell Armenta (MSCE ’19) visited Seattle’s West Point Treatment Plant twice per week for two years during his graduate studies. From taking samples to monitoring equipment, Armenta helped to further an innovative new wastewater treatment system that researchers believe will improve surface water quality through nutrient removal at a lower cost than other options.

Learn more - Wastewater treatment innovation

Light rail on a floating bridge

Research area: Structural Engineering & Mechanics

Kristina Tsvetanova and John Stanton discuss an appropriate location for a potentiometer

CEE graduate student Kristina Tsvetanova (MSCE ’17) and professor John Stanton discuss an appropriate location for a potentiometer that will record data during testing of a prototype designed to secure rails to the I-90 bridge deck without the use of bolts.

Light rail will cross a floating bridge for the first time in the world in 2023, when the Sound Transit East Link Extension Project is completed. CEE graduate student Kristina Tsvetanova (MSCE ’17) will have played a small part in the engineering feat through her work leading a team of researchers who tested various prototypes. The researchers worked on one of two big engineering challenges associated with connecting light rail to a floating bridge: attaching rails without bolts.

Learn more - Light rail on a floating bridge

Investigating legacy arsenic contamination

Research area: Hydrology & Hydrodynamics

Graduate student Samantha Fung

At Lake Killarney, graduate student Samantha Fung offloads data from a dissolved oxygen probe to a field computer for future analysis.

Several times per month, graduate student Samantha Fung heads to Lake Killarney, a shallow lake surrounded by greenery and lakeside homes in Federal Way, Wash. Unlike many who frequent the lake, she isn’t there for recreation. Fung is there to learn more about a surprising discovery: some shallow lakes have unique characteristics that facilitate the movement of arsenic from lakebed sediment up into the food web. The researchers hope to improve future arsenic water-quality guidelines, as well as help prioritize which lakes are in urgent need of remediation.

Learn more - Investigating legacy arsenic contamination

Developing landslide risk maps

Research area: Geotechnical Engineering

Graduate student William Pollock, right

Graduate student William Pollock, right, assesses landslide zones in the Magnolia neighborhood of Seattle.

When it comes to safeguarding Seattle from landslide hazards, graduate student William Pollock (Ph.D. ’20) had a plan mapped out – quite literally. He developed a first-of-its-kind map that predicts landslide risk throughout the city. Since existing landslide maps for the city of Seattle only identify the location of landslide-prone areas, the risk map that Pollock developed with his faculty adviser will be more meaningful to stakeholders and communities, as it estimates the monetary impact of damage and the potential for loss of life.

Learn more - Developing landslide risk maps

Unpacking traffic congestion

Research area: Transportation Engineering

Graduate student Haena Kim

At Seattle Municipal Tower, graduate student Haena Kim gathers delivery data with a team of researchers.

To address the complicated last leg of urban deliveries, when a delivery driver must locate both parking and customers, graduate student Haena Kim led a pilot study at Seattle Municipal Tower to implement a smart locker system that created delivery density by accommodating packages from all retailers. The researchers’ objective was to lower the number of failed delivery attempts, which is when a delivery driver can’t locate a customer, and to reduce the amount of time trucks are parked, which helps alleviate traffic congestion.

Learn more - Unpacking traffic congestion

Creating seismically resilient, sustainable buildings

Research area: Structural Engineering & Mechanics

Graduate student Sarah Wichman

While preparing for earthquake simulator testing of a new structural system, graduate student Sarah Wichman helps oversee the installation of rocking wall systems.

To inform the next generation of buildings constructed in earthquake zones, graduate student Sarah Wichman conducted research to prove that high-rises crafted from a new type of sustainable timber, paired with a rocking wall system, are seismically resilient. In collaboration with researchers across the country, Wichman was involved in testing a two-story structure, which underwent 14 earthquake simulations with no significant damage at the University of California San Diego’s Natural Hazards Engineering Research Infrastructure Center.

Learn more - Creating seismically resilient, sustainable buildings

Related News

Mon, 02/01/2016

NASA data used to track groundwater in Pakistan

The vast farmlands of Pakistan — a country with an economy based on agriculture — rely on one of the largest continuous irrigation systems in the world. Farmers were once able to depend solely on rivers and man-made canals fed by glaciers and rain.

Fri, 01/01/2016

What motivates people to walk and bike? It varies by income

Lower- and middle-income King C ounty residents who live in denser neighborhoods with stores, libraries and othe r destinations within easy reach are more likely to walk or bike, according to n ew University of Washington research.

Fri, 01/01/2016

Bluetooth and Wi-Fi sensing from mobile devices may help improve bus service

On any given bus ride, a good share of passengers are reading, texting or rocking out to music on their phones or tablets. In the future, those mobile devices may add more value to our transit commutes than simply filling time.