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How do we design buildings to reduce infectious aerosol transmission risk? In collaboration with @SafeTraces… https://t.co/PkaEIYVIXK
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Cool story! Extra cool because I got to tag along 😉 https://t.co/bxagwuUlJw
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RT @michaelmina_lab: Very nice new study “proving” viable sars2 virus in bioaerosols Of course, this was obvious as soon as the 1st sup… https://t.co/dveRxm3ExQ
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RT @KeithMolenaar: Meet Shelby Buckley, an environmental engineering student in @CUEngineering that recently studied the impacts of cl… https://t.co/b7nJ04Cvwr
Introductions
After growing up in the American Central Plains and Boise, Idaho, I relocated to beautiful Boulder, Colorado to study mechanical engineering at the University of Colorado. Little did I know that I would end up staying in Boulder for the next decade earning my B.S., M.S., and PhD in mechanical engineering while working with many wonderful engineers and scientists in the air quality community.
Following completion of a post-doc at CU Boulder researching surge control for pandemic flu and indoor air quality, I relocated to Rochester, Minnesota to work at the Well Living Lab, as a Director with Delos Labs. I have since moved back to Denver, Colorado and still work remotely with the Well Living Lab.
Science
I blame my love of the environmental sciences on my fifth-grade science teacher, Mr. Cornell, who gathered a group of students to work on a science project outside of class and present the project with high school students at a local college. Our project was about how electronics are recycled and the importance of keeping electronics out of landfills. In high school I co-founded the Environment Club and was fascinated by chemistry and physics, which lead to studying engineering in college.
While attending the University of Colorado Boulder, I got involved in air quality research through the Discovery Learning Apprenticeship and worked on a UV-C disinfection project for public transportation. Just before graduating with my undergraduate degree, I began working on my PhD research project, the Colorado Coarse Rural-Urban Sources and Health (CCRUSH) study, a three-year air quality monitoring project aimed at understanding coarse and fine particulate matter concentrations in rural and urban communities in Colorado. The CCRUSH study included long-term mass concentration monitoring at three locations using the TEOM 1405-DF, a year of filter sample collection for composition analyses using an in-house built dichotomous sampler, and an epidemiologic study.
As a post doc, my research focus shifted towards infection control and indoor air quality. My primary project involved designing and validating a temporary isolation ward to increase hospital surge capacity. I was also involved in analyzing a large indoor air quality data set from 15 homes in Boulder County.
At the Well Living Lab, I help manage sensor and building systems, perform data analysis on large sets of environmental data, plan/propose research experiments and strategy, and coordinate research investigations.
Future research directions include studies of: indoor and outdoor air quality, dust emissions, hospital infection control and contamination transport, bioaerosols and the microbiome, applied statistics in air quality, data visualization, and open dissemination of air quality data.
Personal
When I am not busy with science and engineering, I spend my time hiking, biking, and skiing in the beautiful Colorado Rockies and making music on guitar, harmonica, ukulele, synthesizers, and anything that makes noise.
In the summer of 2013 I drove from London to Mongolia for charity as part of the Mongol Rally. We visited 14 countries and completed the whole trip in a 0.9 L Perodua Kelisa EX while raising money for regional charities.