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faculty and student researchResearch is the hallmark of every great university, and it is central to graduate education at UMass Boston, where important research is carried out by students at both the master's and doctoral levels. Led or directed by UMass Boston faculty, this research contributes to the development of new knowledge in all of the disciplines that are studied here, from the humanities to computer science. Student research in the natural and physical sciences has provided new understanding and applications in environmentally benign chemistry, environmental monitoring, remote sensing and mapping, medical imaging, optical communications and computing, information processing, and software engineering. Below are just some of the many research programs and projects underway at the College of Science and Mathematics.
Green ChemistryGreen chemistry involves an ecologically sustainable view of chemical research, development and manufacture, and is dedicated to chemistry to benefit society. Toxicological understanding and environmental fate are necessary components to understanding the entire "molecular life cycle" of any commercial endeavor. The Green Chemistry Ph.D. is a Track within the Environmental Sciences Department, and is administered by the Chemistry Department. It is the first such program in the world. Students obtaining a degree from this program will be prepared for conventional chemistry jobs in industry, government and academia. In addition to traditional training in the chemical sciences, required and elective courses in the Biology and Environmental, Earth and Ocean Sciences (EEOS) Departments provide graduates with the tools and experience to assess human impact on health and the environment. Timothy Dransfield, Department of Chemistry (back to top) Biodiversity in Fragmented Tropical ForestsTropical deforestation and forest fragmentation raise many global environmental concerns, including potential loss of biodiversity as a result of habitat alteration. Professor Kamal Bawa of the Biology Department directs a multifaceted, interdisciplinary research project focused on these changes. One major goal of the project is to improve the conservation of tropical forests by understanding the biological and socioeconomic reasons for their decline. Another major goal is to identify the effects of habitat degradation on the biodiversity of forest trees. He and molecular geneticist Richard Kesseli are approaching this problem by using genetic markers to study genetic diversity and patterns of gene flow in contiguous and fragmented Costa Rican forests. Professor Bawa is working with non-governmental organizations, conservationists, and the Soligas who inhabit a tropical forest in India to develop locally managed enterprises, based on such non-timber forest products as honey, fruit, and herbal medicines, that are both economically and ecologically sustainable. The Bawa and Kesseli work will provide essential information that can be used by forest managers and conservationists to mitigate the effects of forest fragmentation and help maintain genetic diversity. Supported by the National Science Foundation, National Institutes of Health, MacArthur Foundation, World Wildlife Fund, and International Plant Genetics Institute. Kamaljit S. Bawa, Department of Biology Biodiversity of Deep Sea MollusksDrs. Ron J. Etter and Michael A. Rex of the Biology Department are conducting the first molecular genetic study of population differentiation and speciation in the deep sea. The deep sea is the largest and least known ecosystem on Earth. Recent exploration has revealed a surprisingly varied and dynamic environment, and quite unexpectedly high biodiversity. While a picture of ecological patterns is emerging, the evolutionary origin of this rich and highly endemic fauna is unknown. This represents a huge gap in our understanding of basic evolutionary phenomena and presents a number of major theoretical challenges. The primary evidence of evolutionary divergence in other environments is genetic populations structure. This research is providing important clues about how life evolved in the deep ocean. It also has implications for conservation of biodiversity in an environment that is targeted for massive international exploitation for petroleum exploration, mining and waste disposal. Supported by the National Science Foundation. Ron E. Etter, Department of Biology Lasers to Integrate Photonics with ElectronicsIn the less than four decades that have elapsed since their inception, laser devices have revolutionized many technologies due to their high power, coherence, and spectral purity. Professor Greg Sun of the Engineering Program is working on the development of a tunable intersubband Raman laser, part of a new family of semiconductor lasers that, unlike conventional lasers, can operate in the range of mid-to-far infrared and bridge the wide frequency gap between electronics and optics. Recently Dr. Sun has begun to expand the idea of intersubband lasing to the quantum structures of silicon-based materials, establishing models for the quantum confined phonons in these material systems as well as their interactions with carriers which determines the intersubband lasing lifetimes. Although silicon is the most readily available semiconductor material for electronics, it has inefficient light emitting properties when used in conventional semiconductor devices. The development of efficient silicon-based intersubband lasers opens up the important possibility of achieving the ultimate goal of monolithic integration of photonic devices with electronics. Dr. Sun's work, therefore, has major implications for current microelectronics technology. Supported by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research of the Department of Defense. Greg Sun, Engineering Program (back to top) Renewable Energy ChemistryThis Research probe environmentally benign methods of generating, storing, distributing and utilizing natural energy resources, as well as the economic consequences of the use of alternative fuels. Renewable energy sources utilize natural processes, such as those originating from solar, wind, water, and geothermal sources. Many of these sources are intermittent and/or energetically diffuse, and supporting processes also need to be explored to efficiently store, concentrate and distribute these energy sources. Laboratories at the University of Massachusetts Boston explore efficient capture and conversion of solar energy, effective generation, distribution and use of hydrogen fuel, green battery chemistries which store greater energy and have less impact on the environment, new fuel cell studies, and the fate and distribution of pollutants resulting from new and traditional energy generation sources. Deyang Qu, Department of Chemistry (back to top) Electronic Field Guide ProjectThe Electronic Field Guide Project, directed by Drs. Robert Morris, Mathematics and Computer Science and Robert Stevenson, Biology, will make it possible to identify biological specimens in the field using a web-accessible, distributed object-oriented database. Taxonomic, environmental, and ecological information in the database will aid identification by building a context for each observation. The database will also support the recording of multiple observations, so that larger-scale ecological studies can be carried out using the data. The flexible electronic field guide can have its user interface tailored to the target audience--school children documenting the biodiversity of their schoolyard; professional biologists documenting species loss; governmental agencies supervising environmental impact studies; etc. It can communicate with other biodiversity databases via the Internet so that researchers, governmental and non-governmental agencies, and teachers can access and compare information worldwide. Supported by the National Science Foundation. Robert Morris, Department of Computer Science Cuticular Hardening and Insect ImmunityInsects have a great impact on agriculture, the food industry, and health sciences. Professor Manickam Sugumaran, Biology Department is studying several processes that are essential for the survival of insects: cuticular sclerotization (hardening), melanization, immunity, and wound healing. By elucidating the molecular mechanisms underlying these vital physiological processes, his laboratory is working toward the development of new and novel insecticides that are environmentally safe. They have discovered unsuspected pathways, key enzymes, and crosslinking molecules involved in cuticular hardening and insect immunity. In collaboration with INBIO in Costa Rica, Sugumaran and colleague Kamal Bawa are looking in the tropical rain forests for new molecules to expand this biochemical work, focusing on inhibitors that would disrupt the action of key enzymes such as phenoloxidase, quinone isomerase, dopachrome isomerase, and quinone methide isomerase. The findings are currently being transformed into biological control measures for agricultural pests and noxious insects that spread such dreaded diseases as malaria. The basic research findings are also being applied in diverse other ways: natural hair color; prevention of oxidative browning in food products; biological glues and novel polymers; skin color lightening agents; toughening of silk; and antimelanoma drugs. Supported by the National Institutes of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Fogerty International Institute, and Lawrence M. Gelb Research Foundation Manickam Sugumaran, Department of Biology (back to top) Chemical Sensors and ECOShuttle
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