Pietro Mazzon, ha vinto il Premio per Dottori di Ricerca “Giovanni Maria Zuppi” 2025.
La tesi premiata, intitolata “Reactive transport modelling of a chlorinated solvent plume and uncertainty analysis: a case study”, è stata valutata dal Comitato Italiano dell’International Association of Hydrogeologists (IAH-Italy) e dall’Istituto di Geologia Ambientale e Geoingegneria del CNR (IGAG-CNR).
Il premio riconosce i lavori di ricerca che affrontano temi idrogeologici, con particolare attenzione all’applicazione e allo sviluppo di metodologie idrogeochimiche e isotopiche.
Chiara Recalcati ha ricevuto il Prix de la Faculté des Geosciences et de l’Environnement (Université de Lausanne, Svizzera) per la sua Tesi di Dottorato “(PhD Thesis: “Stochastic characterization of reactive processes in porous media“.
Chiara ha appena completato il percorso di Doppio Dottorato, conseguendo il titolo di Dottore di Ricerca in Environmental and Infrastructure Engineering presso il Politecnico di Milano e in Earth Sciences presso l’Université de Lausanne, Svizzera.
La Laudatio recita: In recognition of her seminal and synergistic experimental and theoretical studies leading to quantitative understanding of nano-scale patterns of heterogeneous geochemical reactions taking place at mineral-fluid interfaces and driving chemical weathering of the Earth interior.
Il premio è stato conferito durante la cerimonia ufficiale tenutasi a Losanna il 6 dicembre 2024.
Il prossimo appuntamento con la serie di incontri PhDTalks si terrà Martedì 23 gennaio nell’aula Fassò (Edificio 4A), dalle 17:15 alle 18:30 CET.
PhDTalks è una serie di seminari e discussioni tra dottorandi. Gli eventi hanno lo scopo di fornire un luogo dove creare un network tra dottorandi ed entrare in contatto con i molti progetti sviluppati nel nostro dipartimento.
Lo speaker Luca Iorio condurrà un seminario dal titolo “Metamaterials and topological mechanics for elastic wave control”.
Al termine dell’evento sarà disponibile un piccolo rinfresco finanziato dal dipartimento.
Sarà possibile seguire la conferenza anche online al seguente link.
Abstract
Metamaterials and architected materials are engineered materials with static and dynamic properties beyond (“meta”) those of their individual ingredients.
Their role in elastic and acoustic wave manipulation and stress localization has been shown in the last years, yielding novel results for signal amplification, energy harvesting and mode conversion.
In this talk, the main results of our research group in the field of elastic wave control through localization, mode conversion and energy harvesting will be presented. The various techniques used to achieve these kinds of extreme manipulations will be shown.
The presentation will conclude on novel and intriguing energy localization phenomena observed in topologically polarized soft structural lattices.
Speaker’s bio
Luca Iorio is a PhD candidate in structural, seismic and geotechnical engineering (37th cycle) at Politecnico di Milano. Luca has a bachelor’s and master’s degree in materials and nanotechnology engineering. He is currently working on metamaterials for energy harvesting for the European 2020 project Metaveh and more specifically on the study and development of metamaterials for elastic energy localization, mode conversion and topological mechanics.
Il prossimo appuntamento con la serie di incontri PhDTalks si terrà Martedì 18 Aprile nell’aula 2.1.3 (Edificio 2), dalle 17:15 alle 18:30 CET.
PhDTalks è una serie di seminari e discussioni tra dottorandi. Gli eventi hanno lo scopo di fornire un luogo dove creare un network tra dottorandi ed entrare in contatto con i molti progetti sviluppati nel nostro dipartimento.
Lo speaker Giuseppe Cecere condurrà un seminario dal titolo “The role of Social Hotspot analysis in waste management: assessing sectoral social impacts for a better understanding of social risks”.
Al termine dell’evento sarà disponibile un piccolo rinfresco finanziato dal dipartimento.
Sarà possibile seguire la conferenza anche online al seguente link.
Abstract:
Social Life Cycle Assessment (S-LCA) is a methodology developed to assess the negative and positive social impacts of products and services, along their life cycle. The new Guidelines for Social Life Cycle Assessment of Products together with the Methodological Sheets, published in 2021 by the United Nations Environment Programme, provide a roadmap to help stakeholders in the assessment of social impacts of products’ life cycles. However, applications are hindered by the high sensitivity of the data under investigation and the relative novelty of the methodology. The Social Hotspot analysis allows, as a preventive measure and through secondary data, to identify the social issues that should be focused on during risk assessment. This type of analysis that allows the identification of the most sensitive themes can be used as a first step in the application of the S-LCA. In the waste sector, the application of methodologies to assess social impacts could be particularly useful. Waste management facilities often suffer from strong protests both during construction and operation. Phenomena such as Not In My Backyard (NIMBY) syndrome and Locally Unwanted Land Use (LULU) are very common during the planning and implementation of this type of facilities. Most of these objections are often due to a bad communication approach on both sides and a denial of potential social and environmental impacts by plant operators. Using the Product Social Impact Life Cycle Assessment (PSILCA) database, this study aims to identify the social hotspots that characterise the waste and wastewater management industry sector in the Italian context. In order to create a suitable reference scale, the results for Italy were compared with the results of several European countries. The result is an industrial sector risk assessment, calibrated on the European context, which can be used as a first step in the evaluation of subcategories and indicators to be prioritised in the assessment of social impacts in the context of waste and wastewater management facilities.
Speaker’s bio:
Giuseppe is a PhD Candidate in Environmental and Infrastracture Engineering (37° cycle) at Politecnico di Milano. Since 2020, he has been working with the AWARE research group. For his PhD project, he is working on the application of Life Cycle Thinking methodologies to the waste management sector. He holds a Master’s degree from the University of Padua and a Bachelor’s degree from the University of Naples ‘Federico II’.