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John
H. Seinfeld
Louis
E. Nohl Professor & Professor of Chemical Engineering
B.S.,
University of Rochester, 1964
Ph.D., Princeton University, 1967
Office
Location: 227 Spalding Lab
Mail Code: 210-41
Phone: (626) 395-4635
Fax: (626) 796-2591
Seinfeld
Research Group |
Research
Atmospheric chemistry and physics, Aerosols
Awards
and Honors
Wallace Memorial Fellow, Princeton University (1966-1967); Donald P. Eckman Award, American Automatic Control Council (1970); Camille and Henry Dreyfus Foundation Teacher-Scholar Grant (1972); Curtis W. McGraw Research Award, American Society for Engineering Education (1976); Allan P. Colburn Award, American Institute of Chemical Engineers (1976); Thirty-Second Institute Lecturer, American Institute of Chemical Engineers (1980); Public Service Award, NASA (1980); National Academy of Engineering (1982); William H. Walker Award, American Institute of Chemical Engineers (1986); Fellow, Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (1986); George Westinghouse Award, American Society for Engineering Education (1987); Special Creativity Award, National Science Foundation (1988); Service Through Chemistry Award, Orange County Section of American Chemical Society (1988); Distinguished Alumnus Award, College of Engineering and Applied Science, University of Rochester (1989); Fellow, American Academy of Arts and Sciences (1991); Award for Creative Advances in Environmental Science and Technology, American Chemical Society (1993); Fellow, American Institute of Chemical Engineers (1995); Fuchs Award, International Aerosol Research Assembly (1998); Fellow, American Association for the Advancement of Science (1999); Warren K. Lewis Award, American Institute of Chemical Engineers (2000); Nevada Medal (2001); D.Sc.h.c., University of Patras (2002); D.Sc.h.c., Carnegie Mellon University (2002); Haagen-Smit Clean Air Award, State of California Air Resources Board (2003); Fellow, American Geophysical Union (2004); Atmospheric Environment Haagen-Smit Award, 2004; ASLI Choice Award, “Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics”, Atmospheric Science Librarians International, 2006. |