Dr Alma Schellart
MSc, PhD
School of Mechanical, Aerospace and Civil Engineering
Senior Lecturer in Water Engineering
+44 114 222 5765
Full contact details
School of Mechanical, Aerospace and Civil Engineering
Room F126
Sir Frederick Mappin Building (Broad Lane Building)
Mappin Street
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S1 3JD
- Profile
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By aiming to understand water flow and quality throughout the whole catchment, and how uncertainty is introduced into numerical modelling, I can advise the water industry on how to better manage our existing sewer infrastructure, and make it more cost-effective and sustainable.
Dr Alma Schellart
Alma studied her MSc degree in Civil Engineering specialising in Water Management at Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands.
After completing her PhD on uncertainty in sewer sediment transport with us, she worked as a researcher here on uncertainty in integrated water quality modelling and the use of rainfall radar data.
From 2011 to 2013 Alma lectured at the University of Bradford where she expanded her research on urban rainfall and started research on energy balance in the urban water cycle and heat recovery from urban drainage systems. She rejoined the Department in 2013.
- Research interests
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Alma’s research focuses on improving our existing sewer systems and finding better ways to manage them as the global population grows.
By using computer modelling, fieldwork and laboratory measurements she seeks to improve the numerical models used to manage sewer systems.
She looks at water quality and quantity as both are vital for managing and monitoring for our existing systems.
Alma’s work in water quality explores uncertainty and involves predicting the amount of run-off and sediments that may enter our water systems.
The pattern and amount of water which enters our sewer systems is expected to change significantly because of climate change and population growth. Alma aims to find solutions to make better use of our existing sewer infrastructure, which are more sustainable and cost-effective.
Alma has coordinated a large , looking into quantifying uncertainty in integrated catchment studies.
This involved seven other universities and several commercial partners in their exploration of uncertainty in different models and data collection methods, in order to gain a bigger picture of simulating water flow and quality throughout the whole catchment.
- Publications
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Journal articles
Chapters
Conference proceedings papers
Preprints
- Research group
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SuDS (Sustainable Drainage Systems) and Urban Drainage
Environmental Fluid Mechanics
- Grants
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Past Grants
The EPSRC-funded Grand Challenge Centre for Water, comprising 6 UK universities and 100+ industrial partners working in collaboration to develop the sustainable water solutions of the future and to accelerate innovation uptake across the water sector.
- Professional activities and memberships
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- Coordinator of Marie-Curie Initial Training Network on Quantifying Uncertainty in Integrated Catchment Studies – 2014 to 2018
- Co -Investigator on CENTAUR H2020 project: /centaur - 2015 - 2018
- Co-Investigator on TWENTY65 - https://twenty65.ac.uk/ - 2016 - 2021
- Member of IWA Working Group in Data and Models, and IWA working group Sewer Processes and Networks
- Potential PhD offerings
Unfortunately I am not seeking any PhD Students at this time, however please contact me if you are interested in doing a project in my research area.