Summary
Rosalie Krasnoff is a PhD candidate in Earth and Environmental Engineering at Columbia University focusing on the pore-scale chemistry and transport controls of carbonate formation between mineral-bound cations and CO2 to inform improved carbon management and storage. With eight years of experience spanning lab research, atmospheric model analysis, and leading large student engineering teams, she blends rigorous experimental and computational skills to study precipitation dynamics and CO2–rock interactions. Her work also examines how cement microstructure can be engineered to enhance carbonate formation in built materials, bridging fundamental geochemistry with practical carbon sequestration strategies. Earlier roles in aerosol-climate analysis and resource-appropriate wastewater treatment highlight a systems-level perspective and commitment to applied solutions in low-resource settings. Collected leadership of a 100-person student organization and hands-on modeling experience in Arctic ecosystems reflect both organizational grit and technical versatility.
8 years of coding experience
3 years of employment as a software developer
Doctor of Philosophy - PhD, Environmental/Environmental Health Engineering, Doctor of Philosophy - PhD, Environmental/Environmental Health Engineering at Columbia University in the City of New York
Bachelor of Science (BS), Environmental Engineering, Bachelor of Science (BS), Environmental Engineering at Cornell University
Master of Science - MS, Earth and Environmental Engineering, Master of Science - MS, Earth and Environmental Engineering at Columbia University