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Civil and Environmental Engineering

Shihong Lin

Associate Professor

Dr. Lin’s research interests are in water separation processes for addressing critical sustainability challenges. The three current research areas in his group include (1) desalination and water treatment, (2) resource extraction and recovery, and (3) brine management. His recent work primarily focuses on advancing both the technologies and scientific understanding in membrane and electrochemical separation for water treatment and critical mineral extraction. Dr. Lin has authored more than 150 peer-reviewed publications in leading journals of the field and has been recognized as a Highly Cited Researcher by Clarivate (Web of Science). He currently serves as an Associate Editor of Environmental Science & Technology (ES&T). Dr. Lin has received multiple awards for his scholarly achievements, with notable ones including the Paul L. Busch Award from Water Research Foundation (2020), the Walter L. Huber Research Prize (2023) from American Society of Civil Engineers, and the Early Career Award from the Association of Chinese American Professors in Environmental Engineering and Science (2020). He also won the ES&T Best Paper Award in the category Environmental Technology (2024). Dr. Lin is passionate about training and mentoring the next generation scholars, researchers, and engineers in environmental engineering. He received the Excellence in Graduate Student Mentoring Award from Vanderbilt (2023) and is also the faculty advisor recipient of the Jacobs Engineering Group/AEESP Outstanding Doctoral Dissertation Award from the Association of Environmental Engineering and Science Professors (2024).

Public Rice profile source

Average rating

3.8

11 temporary mock ratings

Difficulty

2.7

course-linked average

Courses

3

in seeded sections

Public profile

Biography

Dr. Lin’s research interests are in water separation processes for addressing critical sustainability challenges. The three current research areas in his group include (1) desalination and water treatment, (2) resource extraction and recovery, and (3) brine management. His recent work primarily focuses on advancing both the technologies and scientific understanding in membrane and electrochemical separation for water treatment and critical mineral extraction. Dr. Lin has authored more than 150 peer-reviewed publications in leading journals of the field and has been recognized as a Highly Cited Researcher by Clarivate (Web of Science). He currently serves as an Associate Editor of Environmental Science & Technology (ES&T). Dr. Lin has received multiple awards for his scholarly achievements, with notable ones including the Paul L. Busch Award from Water Research Foundation (2020), the Walter L. Huber Research Prize (2023) from American Society of Civil Engineers, and the Early Career Award from the Association of Chinese American Professors in Environmental Engineering and Science (2020). He also won the ES&T Best Paper Award in the category Environmental Technology (2024). Dr. Lin is passionate about training and mentoring the next generation scholars, researchers, and engineers in environmental engineering. He received the Excellence in Graduate Student Mentoring Award from Vanderbilt (2023) and is also the faculty advisor recipient of the Jacobs Engineering Group/AEESP Outstanding Doctoral Dissertation Award from the Association of Environmental Engineering and Science Professors (2024).

Research areas

- Separation science and technology for resource sustainability - Water treatment and desalination - Critical mineral extraction and recovery - Brine management

Courses taught

CEVE 208

Materials Behind Modern Life

This course introduces students to the materials that underpin modern life and how those materials are obtained, processed, and transformed into everyday products and systems. Rather than focusing on how technologies operate, the course examines where key materials come from, how they are extracted, separated, refined, and manufactured, and how these processes shape resource use and environmental impacts. Using examples drawn from the material foundations of daily life—including food, shelter, mobility, and energy—the course traces how raw materials become the products and systems that support modern living. Designed as a distribution course for first- and second-year undergraduates, the class assumes no prior engineering background and emphasizes conceptual understanding of material supply chains, industrial processing, and their environmental implications.

Civil and Environmental EngD13 credits
3.87.5hLin, Shihong

CEVE 800

Ph.D. Research And Thesis

Repeatable for Credit.

Civil and Environmental EngNone1-15 credits
3.55.8hAlvarez, Pedro, Bedient, Philip, Cohan, Daniel, Doss-Gollin, James, Duenas Osorio, Leonardo, Elimelech, Menachem, Getachew, Beza, Gong, Kai, Gori, Avantika, Li, Qilin, Lin, Shihong, Nagarajaiah, Satish, Padgett, Jamie, Qian, Xinwu, Simoes Novelino, Larissa, Spanos, Pol, Stadler, Lauren, Tomson, Mason, Wong, Michael, Yi, Sang-ri

CHBE 800

Graduate Research

Repeatable for Credit.

Chemical & Biomolecular EngNone1-15 credits
3.37.3hAdams, Jason, Ajo-Franklin, Caroline, Alvarez, Pedro, Biswal, Sibani, Chapman, Walter, Firoozabadi, Abbas, Gao, Xue, Kampouri, Stavroula, Kolomeisky, Anatoly, Landes, Christy, Li, Qilin, Lin, Shihong, MacKintosh, Frederick, Marciel, Amanda, Mohite, Aditya, Pasquali, Matteo, Senftle, Thomas, Sholl, David, Silberg, Joff, Singer, Philip, Tabor, Jeffrey, Thyer, Ross, Veiseh, Omid, Verduzco, Rafael, Wang, Haotian, Wong, Michael, Zhang, Yirui Arlene

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