-
-
Career Resources
-
Celebrating E-Week
-
Cities in Japan, Southern California showing the world that hydrogen is the future
The University of California at Irvine is leading the way in understanding hydrogen and its many uses. "We are standing at the precipice of an important realization that the world is coming to," says Dr. Jack Brouwer, director of the National Fuel Cell Research Center at UCI. "If we really want to achieve zero emissions in all sectors of the economy, we absolutely need hydrogen to do it," he adds. [starts at 2:20] Read More
-
Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering
Chemical engineering uses the knowledge of chemistry, mathematics, physics, biology, and social sciences to solve societal problems such as energy, health, environment, food, clothing, shelter, and transportation. It serves a variety of processing industries whose vast array of products include chemicals, petroleum products, plastics, pharmaceuticals, foods, semiconductors, textiles, fuels, consumer products, and electronic and cryogenic materials. It also serves society to improve the environment by reducing and eliminating pollution.
-
Contact Us
Administration
- Zoran Nenadic, Chair
- Holly Byrnes, Chief Administrative Officer
- Sally L. Avila, Payroll and Personnel Analyst
- Maggie Mulcare, Academic Coordinator
- Khang Pham, Business Office Analyst
- James Shyu, Senior Electronics Technician
-
CEE Affiliates
The purpose of the UCI Civil and Environmental Engineering (CEE) Affiliates is to provide an effective means to offer support and guidance to the department, its programs and students, and to act as an interface between the professional civil and environmental engineering community in Southern California, particularly Orange County, and the university. The CEE Affiliates includes senior executives representing leading civil and environmental engineering firms (both large and small) and public agencies, as well as individual members.
-
Celebrate UCI
-
Climate change could fuel bigger summer waves in Southern California
“All these other things play a role, but waves are one of the most important causes of coastal erosion and flooding,” said Brett Sanders, an engineering professor who leads a UC Irvine team in coastal flooding and erosion hazards research. … “You could reach the point where the beaches don’t have a chance to recover,” said Sanders, who oversees the Metropolitan Beaches Projects online at sites.uci.edu/beaches.