Contaminant Containment

New techniques could better predict where hazardous materials go in the event of environmental disasters.

Written byVirginia Tech
| 3 min read
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BLACKSBURG, Va., Sept. 8, 2015 – Catastrophic oil spills, nuclear power accidents, and erupting volcanoes all share a common thread. They are environmental disasters where the flow of hazardous materials, dispersed by the natural movements of air and/or water, seem uncontrollable.

The prediction of where materials go in such complex environmental flows "remains a formidable scientific challenge," said Shane Ross, associate professor of biomedical engineering and mechanics at Virginia Tech.

Ross, who received a National Science Foundation (NSF) CAREER award in 2012 to study engineering tools to understand and predict fluid motions, is now the co-principal investigator on a new $2.6 million NSF award that will focus on specific methods for the successful prediction, mitigation, and response to an environmental flow hazard.

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