Vicki H. Grassian is a distinguished professor in the department of chemistry and biochemistry at the University of California, San Diego. She also holds the distinguished chair in physical chemistry.
In 1990 Grassian joined the faculty of the University of Iowa, where she earned a General Electric Foundation Faculty Fellowship.[1] She began to research the reactions between trace atmospheric gases (i.e. nitrogen oxides and volatile organic compounds) and mineral dust.[6] She has since established herself as one of the world's leading scientists studying the environmental reactions on oxide and carbonate surfaces.[6] She was appointed full professor and won the Distinguished Achievement Award in 2002.[7] There are several particles in the Earth's atmosphere, mostly consisting of mineral dust and sea spray, and their surfaces have the ability to influence the Earth's climate.[8] She demonstrated that during the daytime, mineral dust aerosols can convert nitrogen dioxide into nitrous acid.[9] Aerosols can be generated in volcanoes, wildfires, coal-fired power plants and vehicles.[10]
She was named the F. Wendell Miller Chair in Chemistry and Director Nanoscience and Nanotechnology Institute in 2010.[11] She was appointed co-director of the National Science Foundation Center for Aerosol Impacts on Chemistry of the Environment (CAICE).[11] She was made a Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry in 2010 and the American Chemical Society in 2011.[1]
From 2013-2017, Grassian was the inaugural Editor-in-Chief of Environmental Science: Nano a new journal from the Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC) Publishing and held that appointment for five years.[12] She also served as an editor of Surface Science Reports.[13] She won the University of Iowa Scholar of the Year Award in 2014.[14] She mentored over 300 students in her laboratory.[14][15] She became a Chartered Chemist in 2015.[1]
In 2016 moved to the University of California San Diego.[1][16] Here she leads the Grassian Research Group.[17] Her research group focuses on the chemistry and impacts of environmental interfaces including atmospheric aerosols (mineral dust, sea spray), aqueous microdroplets, geochemical and engineered nanomaterials and indoor surfaces. They examine the applications, implications, and toxicity of metal and metal oxide nanoparticles.[18] Her team researches the chemistry of indoor surfaces, including the interactions of indoor gases with components of paints (titanium dioxide), glass, concrete, and drywall.[19] Grassian collaborates with scientists at the Scripps Hydraulics Lab to study particles generated in sea spray.[20] By researching the properties of sea spray aerosol, such as hygroscopicity and chemical reactivity, Grassian looks to develop an understanding of our atmosphere that will help improve current climate models.[21] In 2017 she helped identify that the bubbles that appear on the surface of breaking waves forms particulate matter that depends on molecules secreted by phytoplankton and floor dwelling bacteria for its overall composition.[22] She gave a TEDTalkWhat's Really in the Air We Breathe at TEDxSan Diego in 2018.[23][24]
^Grassian, Vicki H.; Pimentel, George C. (April 1988). "Photochemical reactions of cis- and trans-1,2-dichloroethene adsorbed on Pd(111) and Pt(111)". The Journal of Chemical Physics. 88 (7): 4484–4491. Bibcode:1988JChPh..88.4484G. doi:10.1063/1.453807. ISSN0021-9606.
^Usher, Courtney R.; Michel, Amy E.; Grassian, Vicki H. (December 2003). "Reactions on Mineral Dust". Chemical Reviews. 103 (12): 4883–4940. doi:10.1021/cr020657y. ISSN0009-2665. PMID14664636.
^Grassian, V. H. (February 2002). "Chemical Reactions of Nitrogen Oxides on the Surface of Oxide, Carbonate, Soot, and Mineral Dust Particles: Implications for the Chemical Balance of the Troposphere". The Journal of Physical Chemistry A. 106 (6): 860–877. Bibcode:2002JPCA..106..860G. doi:10.1021/jp012139h. ISSN1089-5639.