Diana Aga | |
---|---|
Born | |
Alma mater | B.S. University of the Philippines at Los Baños, Laguna, Philippines (1988)
Ph.D. University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS (1995) Postdoctoral fellow Swiss Federal Institute of Environmental Science and Technology (ETH/EAWAG), Zurich, Switzerland, (1996-1998) |
Known for | Environmental analytical chemistry, detecting agricultural & pharmaceutical contaminants in water |
Awards |
|
Scientific career | |
Institutions | University at Buffalo |
Thesis | Analytical applications of immunoassays in environmental and agricultural chemistry : study of the fate and transport of herbicides (1995) |
Website | https://www.buffalo.edu/renew/research/alert--aga-lab-for-environmental-research-and-testing.html |
Diana S. Aga is a Filipino-American chemist who is the Henry M. Woodburn Chair in the Chemistry Department at the University at Buffalo. In 2023, she named a SUNY Distinguished Professor. [2] Aga is the director of UB's Research and Education in Energy, Environment and Water (RENEW) Institute. [3] At the University at Buffalo, she named her laboratory in the Chemistry Department at the University - the Aga Laboratory for Environmental Research and Testing (ALERT). [4]
Aga obtained a bachelor's in agricultural chemistry from the University of the Philippines Los Bañosin 1988. [5] She earned a Ph.D from the University of Kansas. For her Ph.D, she researched applications of immunoassays in agricultural chemistry. [6] After graduating, she worked briefly for the United States Geological Survey [7] and then joined ETH Zurich as a postdoctoral scholar for two years.
After a brief spell in industry, Aga returned to academia, and was appointed to the faculty at the University at Buffalo in 2002. [5] In 2000, Aga was awarded an National Science Foundation CAREER Award. [8]
Aga does mass spectroscopy analysis to obtain detailed information on chemical composition and information on compounds in materials. She is one of many scientists worldwide who have applied this mass spectroscopy technique to investigate pesticides in crops, [5] contaminants in ground and wastewater, [9] presence of antibiotics in wastewater, [10] [11] chemical compositions of brominated flame retardants( polybrominated diphenyl ethers, BDEs) which are toxic chemicals. [12] Aga has co-authored a paper describing the presence of pharmaceuticals, in particular antidepressants, in Great Lakes fish. [13] [14] [15]
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cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (
link)
Diana Aga | |
---|---|
Born | |
Alma mater | B.S. University of the Philippines at Los Baños, Laguna, Philippines (1988)
Ph.D. University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS (1995) Postdoctoral fellow Swiss Federal Institute of Environmental Science and Technology (ETH/EAWAG), Zurich, Switzerland, (1996-1998) |
Known for | Environmental analytical chemistry, detecting agricultural & pharmaceutical contaminants in water |
Awards |
|
Scientific career | |
Institutions | University at Buffalo |
Thesis | Analytical applications of immunoassays in environmental and agricultural chemistry : study of the fate and transport of herbicides (1995) |
Website | https://www.buffalo.edu/renew/research/alert--aga-lab-for-environmental-research-and-testing.html |
Diana S. Aga is a Filipino-American chemist who is the Henry M. Woodburn Chair in the Chemistry Department at the University at Buffalo. In 2023, she named a SUNY Distinguished Professor. [2] Aga is the director of UB's Research and Education in Energy, Environment and Water (RENEW) Institute. [3] At the University at Buffalo, she named her laboratory in the Chemistry Department at the University - the Aga Laboratory for Environmental Research and Testing (ALERT). [4]
Aga obtained a bachelor's in agricultural chemistry from the University of the Philippines Los Bañosin 1988. [5] She earned a Ph.D from the University of Kansas. For her Ph.D, she researched applications of immunoassays in agricultural chemistry. [6] After graduating, she worked briefly for the United States Geological Survey [7] and then joined ETH Zurich as a postdoctoral scholar for two years.
After a brief spell in industry, Aga returned to academia, and was appointed to the faculty at the University at Buffalo in 2002. [5] In 2000, Aga was awarded an National Science Foundation CAREER Award. [8]
Aga does mass spectroscopy analysis to obtain detailed information on chemical composition and information on compounds in materials. She is one of many scientists worldwide who have applied this mass spectroscopy technique to investigate pesticides in crops, [5] contaminants in ground and wastewater, [9] presence of antibiotics in wastewater, [10] [11] chemical compositions of brominated flame retardants( polybrominated diphenyl ethers, BDEs) which are toxic chemicals. [12] Aga has co-authored a paper describing the presence of pharmaceuticals, in particular antidepressants, in Great Lakes fish. [13] [14] [15]
{{
cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (
link)