I am an assistant research professor in the Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering at Penn State University, University Park. My research interests focus on Critical Zone Science and Watershed Hydro-biogeochemistry. More specifically, I am interested in understanding how water moves and interacts with other components in natural environments. Ultimately, I aim to understand and forecast water quantity and quality at the watershed- and continental-scale, using both the process-based reactive transport model and the data-driven machine (deep) learning model.
Academic Profiles:
- 2021, From Hydrometeorology to River Water Quality: Can a Deep Learning Model Predict Dissolved Oxygen at the Continental Scale?
- 2020, The Shallow and Deep Hypothesis: Subsurface Vertical Chemical Contrasts Shape Nitrate Export Patterns from Different Land Uses
- 2021 under review, BioRT-Flux-PIHM v1. 0: a Watershed Biogeochemical Reactive Transport Model
- 2020, Significant Stream Chemistry Response to Temperature Variations in a High-elevation Mountain Watershed
- 2019, Distinct Source Water Chemistry Shapes Contrasting ConcentrationāDischarge Patterns
- 2015, Enhanced Long-term Nitrogen Removal and Its Quantitative Molecular Mechanism in Tidal Flow Constructed Wetlands
- 2014, Quantitative Response Relationships Between Nitrogen Transformation Rates and Nitrogen Functional Genes in a Tidal Flow Constructed Wetland under C/N Ratio Constraints
- 2014, Methods for understanding microbial community structures and functions in microbial fuel cells: A review
- 2012, Constructed wetlands, 1991ā2011: A review of research development, current trends, and future directions