Marilyn Brown

Marilyn Brown
marilyn.brown@pubpolicy.gatech.edu
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Marilyn Brown is a Regents' and Brook Byers Professor of Sustainable Systems in the School of Public Policy. She joined Georgia Tech in 2006 after a distinguished career at the U.S. Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National Laboratory, where she led several national climate change mitigation studies and became a leader in the analysis and interpretation of energy futures in the United States. 

Her research focuses on the design and impact of policies aimed at accelerating the development and deployment of sustainable energy technologies, with an emphasis on the electric utility industry, the integration of energy efficiency, demand response, and solar resources, and ways of improving resiliency to disruptions. Her books include Fact and Fiction in Global Energy Policy (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2016), Green Savings: How Policies and Markets Drive Energy Efficiency (Praeger, 2015), and Climate Change and Global Energy Security (MIT Press, 2011). She has authored more than 250 publications. Her work has had significant visibility in the policy arena as evidenced by her numerous briefings and testimonies before state legislative bodies and Committees of both the U.S. House of Representatives and Senate.

Dr. Brown co-founded the Southeast Energy Efficiency Alliance and chaired its Board of Directors for several years. She has served on the Boards of the American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy and the Alliance to Save Energy, and was a commissioner with the Bipartisan Policy Center. She has served on eight National Academies committees and is an Editor of Energy Policy and an Editorial Board member of Energy Efficiency and Energy Research and Social Science. She served two terms (2010-2017) as a Presidential appointee and regulator on the Board of Directors of the Tennessee Valley Authority, the nation’s largest public power provider. From 2014-2018 she served on DOE’s Electricity Advisory Committee, where she led the Smart Grid Subcommittee.

Regents' Professor, School of Public Policy
Brook Byers Professor
Phone
(404) 385-0303
Additional Research

Hydrogen Equity; ClIMaTe/Environment; Electrical Grid; Policy/Economics; Energy & Water

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Gaurav Doshi

Portrait of Gaurav Doshi, Assistant Professor at Georgia Tech
gdoshi@gatech.edu
Departmental Bio

Gaurav Doshi is an Assistant Professor in the School of Economics. His research interests are in energy and environmental economics, empirical industrial organization, and applied econometrics. His work focuses on the impacts of energy policy on market power and emissions from the fossil fuel sector, technology adoption in the renewable sector, and transition to renewable energy in the US.

Gaurav’s current research uses tools and techniques from industrial organization to study how firms respond to policy changes in electricity and energy markets. He currently teaches courses on Machine Learning for Economics. Prior to joining the faculty at Georgia Tech, Gaurav received his Ph.D. in Applied Economics from the University of Wisconsin Madison in 2023.

Assistant Professor, School of Economics
Office
Old CE Building, Room 210
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Patrick Kastner

Patrick Kastner
pkastner3@gatech.edu
Departmental Bio

Patrick Kastner is a researcher and educator specializing in environmental performance simulation and decarbonization of buildings and cities, and directs the Sustainable Urban Systems Lab at Georgia Tech. He is an Assistant Professor at the School of Architecture and holds a courtesy appointment with the H. Milton Stewart School of Industrial and Systems Engineering.

His goal is to empower urban decision-makers with software tools that place sustainability at the forefront of the profession. He leads a Vertically Integrated Project titled Surrogate Modeling for Urban Regeneration (SMUR), which attracts a diverse group of students ranging from sophomore to graduate level, representing various engineering disciplines and other related fields across Georgia Tech.

He earned his Ph.D. and M.S. in Systems Science and Engineering from Cornell University in 2022. During his doctoral research, he developed Eddy3D, a microclimate modeling software toolkit for Rhino & Grasshopper, now adopted by leading institutions in both academia and practice. He previously taught at Cornell and UPenn.

Originally from Germany, Kastner holds an M.S. in Sustainable Building Science from TU Munich, and a B.S. in Energy Engineeringfrom FAU Erlangen-Nuremberg. While in Munich, he was fortunate enough to study at the Center for Digital Technology and Management and enjoyed his time leading the operations team at TEDxTUM.

Assistant Professor, School of Architecture
Adjunct Assistant Professor — H. Milton Stewart School of Industrial and Systems Engineering Director of the Sustainable Urban Systems Lab
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Michael Filler

Michael Filler
michael.filler@chbe.gatech.edu
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Michael Filler is a professor and the Traylor Faculty Fellow in the School of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering at the Georgia Institute of Technology. He earned his undergraduate and graduate degrees from Cornell University and Stanford University, respectively, prior to completing postdoctoral studies at the California Institute of Technology. Filler has been recognized for his research and teaching with the National Science Foundation CAREER Award, Georgia Tech Sigma Xi Young Faculty Award, CETL/BP Junior Faculty Teaching Excellence Award, and AVS Dorothy M. and Earl S. Hoffman Award. Filler also heads Nanovation, a forum to address the big questions, big challenges, and big opportunities of nanotechnology.

Professor and Traylor Faculty Fellow, School of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering
Director, The Filler Lab
Phone
404.894.0430
Office
Marcus 2135
Additional Research

Integrated photonics, carbon nanotubes, nanomanufacturing, thermal management, silicon devices

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Jian Luo

Jian Luo
jian.luo@ce.gatech.edu
Departmental Bio

Dr. Jian Luo completed his undergraduate and M.S. studies at Tsinghua University, Beijing, where he received a B.Sc.(Eng.) and a M.S. degree in Environmental Engineering in 1998 and 2000, respectively. He completed his Ph.D. in 2006 in Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Stanford University, California. The research Dr. Luo is conducting involves field, theoretical, and computational investigations of flow and reactive transport in subsurface; development and application of geostatistical methods for the spatial and temporal analysis of hydrogeologic and biochemistry data; development of computational algorithms and programs to simulate subsurface flow and reactive transport, and to assess the associated uncertainty; inverse modeling to estimate flow and transport parameters under uncertainty; and use of such computational methods and models to assess subsurface contamination, and to aid the optimal design of groundwater remediation operations.

Professor, School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
Phone
(404) 385-6390
Additional Research

Geosystems; Water

BBISS Initiative Lead Project - Coastal Urban Flooding in a Changing Climate
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Richard Neu

Richard Neu
rick.neu@me.gatech.edu
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Neu's research involves the understanding and prediction of the fatigue behavior of materials and closely related topics, typically when the material must resist degradation and failure in harsh environments. Specifically, he has published in areas involving thermomechanical fatigue, fretting fatigue, creep and environmental effects, viscoplastic deformation and damage development, and related constitutive and finite-element modeling with a particular emphasis on the role of the materials microstructure on the physical deformation and degradation processes. He has investigated a broad range of structural materials including steels, titanium alloys, nickel-base superalloys, metal matrix composites, molybdenum alloys, high entropy alloys, medical device materials, and solder alloys used in electronic packaging. His research has widespread applications in aerospace, surface transportation, power generation, machinery components, medical devices, and electronic packaging. His work involves the prediction of the long-term reliability of components operating in extreme environments such as the hot section of a gas turbine system for propulsion or energy generation. His research is funded by some of these industries as well as government funding agencies.

Professor, School of Materials Science and Engineering, Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering
Director, Mechanical Properties Characterization Facility
Phone
404.894.3074
Office
MRDC 4104
Additional Research

Nanomaterials; micro and nanomechanics; Thermoelectric Materials; fracture and fatigue

Research Focus Areas
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Ching-Hua Huang, Ph.D.

Ching-Hua Huang, Ph.D.
ching-hua.huang@ce.gatech.edu
Departmental Bio

Ching-Hua Huang, Ph.D., is the Turnipseed Family Chair and Professor in the School of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Georgia Institute of Technology. Huang received her Ph.D. and M.S. degrees in environmental engineering from Johns Hopkins University. Huang’s expertise includes environmental chemistry, advanced water/wastewater treatment technology, contaminants of emerging concern, sustainable water reuse, waste remediation and resource recovery. Huang has supervised many research projects sponsored by various agencies, and has published more than 170 peer-reviewed journal papers, book chapters and conference proceeding papers. She is the Associate Editor of the American Chemical Society's Environmental Science & Technology Water and the Editorial Advisory Board member of Environmental Science & Technology. 

Turnipseed Family Chair and Professor, School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
Phone
404.893.7694
Office
School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
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Michael Rodgers

Michael Rodgers
michael.rodgers@ce.gatech.edu
Website
Emeritus Regents Researcher, School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
Director, Georgia Tech Air Quality Laboratory
Phone
(404) 385-0569
Additional Research

Climate/Environment; Electric Vehicles; Smart Infrastructure

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Ellen Dunham-Jones

Ellen Dunham-Jones
ellen.dunham-jones@coa.gatech.edu
Departmental Bio

Ellen is Director of the Master of Science in Urban Design degree, an authority on sustainable suburban redevelopment, and a leading urbanist. Author of over 100 articles, she is co-author with June Williamson of the retrofitting suburbia book series documenting successful retrofits of aging big box stores, malls, and office parks into healthier and more sustainable places. Retrofitting Suburbia: Urban Design Solutions for Redesigning Suburbs, (Wiley, 2009, 2011) received a PROSE award as the best architecture and urban planning book of 2009 and has been featured in The New York Times, Time Magazine, Harvard Business Review, NPR, PBS, TED and other prominent venues. Case Studies in Retrofitting Suburbia: Urban Design Strategies for Urgent Challenges (Wiley, 2020) expands on the first book examining how new retrofits are helping communities disrupt automobile dependence, improve public health, support an aging population, leverage social capital for equity, compete for jobs, and add water and energy resilience. 

Ellen serves on several national boards and committees, is former Chair of the Board of the Congress for the New Urbanism, lectures widely and conducts community workshops. In both her teaching and research she focuses on helping communities address new challenges that they were never designed for – whether that’s through her unique database of successful suburban retrofits or studio classes on anticipating autonomous vehicles, coping with climate change or suburban blight. She taught at UVA and MIT before joining Georgia Tech as Architecture Program Director from 2000-2009.

Professor, School of Architecture
Coordinator, MS Urban Design
Phone
(404) 894-0648
Additional Research

City and Regional Planning

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