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When engineer and researcher Professor Denis O鈥機arroll first came to the Water Research Centre (WRC), he only intended to stay for a short time.聽

At the time, he was based at Western University in Ontario, Canada, but he was immediately impressed by the 国产精品 research environment, as well as the WRC鈥檚 facilities and expertise.

鈥淚 was here on sabbatical in 2011 and 2012, and I really enjoyed working in the Water Research Laboratory at Manly Vale and the Water Research Centre at Kensington,鈥 he says.

鈥淭he breadth and depth of knowledge that my colleagues have is unbelievable.

鈥淎nd then 国产精品 has all kinds of great structures, great facilities, great labs and great tools in those labs, so it鈥檚 very highly ranked in the water [research] space.鈥

In 2015, Professor O鈥機arroll made the move permanent, transferring to the WRC as an ARC Future Fellow.聽 Back then, his research was focused on nanotechnology as it relates to water engineering, including developing nanometals for contaminated site remediation, and investigating the outcomes and ecotoxicity of nanoparticles released from commercial products.

鈥淪tarting with the nanometal work, [we used that] to clean up contaminated sites,鈥 says Professor O鈥機arroll, now the Deputy Head of School (Research) at the 国产精品 School of Civil and Environmental Engineering.

鈥淭here are also microbial communities in the ground, [so we were interested to understand] how the nanometals worked with the natural microbes to work synergistically to clean up the contaminants in the ground.鈥

Over the years, his interests have expanded into the cooling effects of green walls and green roofs and, more recently, into investigating the fate and mitigation of per- and poly-fluoroalkyl substances (PFAS).

Also known as 鈥榝orever chemicals鈥 because they take decades to break down, PFAS are a growing threat to the environment and to human health. They鈥檙e found in all kinds of everyday products, from cosmetics to pizza boxes, which means they鈥檝e also made their way into the soil, the groundwater and our bodies in ever-growing quantities.

鈥淸PFAS] can be contaminants, so we look at where they go in the environment and [how] they change or modify the environment, [as well as how we can clean them up],鈥 Professor O鈥機arroll says.

鈥淲e took our knowledge that we gained in the nano[metal] work and brought that to PFAS 鈥 we鈥檙e [using] some of the same types of background chemistry to treat [them].鈥

What draws all of Professor O鈥機arroll鈥檚 work together is his commitment to using engineering to address pressing challenges facing the environment, as well as his 鈥渕arvellous鈥 team of researchers.

鈥淚鈥檓 interested in water broadly, and typically [in] water quality and looking at contaminants in water 鈥 where they go, how we can clean them up,鈥 he says.

鈥淎nd then [I鈥檓 also] interested in climate change and how we could develop ways to mitigate [its impacts] in urban areas.鈥

He鈥檚 currently winding up a $1.1 million ARC special research grant, awarded in 2019, to develop cost-effective methods to treat large quantities of PFAS-contaminated water.聽

He鈥檚 also working with industry partners, including Property New South Wales and Viral Pacific to deliver novel chemical remediation solutions to PFAS contamination at commercial and government-owned sites.

Next year, Professor O鈥機arroll will commence a $400,000 ARC Discovery project to investigate contaminants of emerging concern, including PFAS, and the drivers that determine their fate in the environment.