Dr. Anna Herring
Anna is originally from a small coal-mining community in Colorado, and has been an avid outdoors sports enthusiast- whitewater kayaking, snowboarding, mountain biking- since childhood. She studied environmental engineering (B.S. from University of Colorado, Boulder; and M.S. and Ph.D. from Oregon State University) because she is personally invested in resolving the conflicts between environmental protection and energy production necessary for modern life. Currently, she is an ARC DECRA postdoctoral fellow at the Australian National University, where her research enables efficient design and optimization of technologies used to fight climate change: storing carbon dioxide in permeable underground geologic formations, and in cements used in construction.
Anna’s research is largely experimental, and is based on highly-resolved visualization of fluid (gas and liquid) flows within permeable media. She applies state-of-the-art visualization techniques to observe complicated 3D solid architecture and flow patterns, on a micro-scale basis, in otherwise opaque samples; and she uses image processing and mathematical topology to quantify fluid-solid structures and interactions. She recently produced the first experimental evidence that micro-scale fluid topology dictates reservoir-scale flow and transport parameters used by engineers. She also investigates how transport of fluids through samples can cause chemical reactions, altering solid surface chemistry and transforming solid structures over time; and she looks at how these reactive transport mechanisms can be manipulated to optimize flow processes in different natural and designed scenarios.
Type
party
Access Privileges
Research School of Physics
Title
Dr.
Given Name
Anna
Surname
Herring
Uni ID
u5259522
ORCID
0000-0002-9403-9779
Brief Description
Her research spans temporal and spatial scales, chemistry and physics, and fundamental science and applied engineering topics.
Full Description
Anna is originally from a small coal-mining community in Colorado, and has been an avid outdoors sports enthusiast- whitewater kayaking, snowboarding, mountain biking- since childhood. She studied environmental engineering (B.S. from University of Colorado, Boulder; and M.S. and Ph.D. from Oregon State University) because she is personally invested in resolving the conflicts between environmental protection and energy production necessary for modern life. Currently, she is an ARC DECRA postdoctoral fellow at the Australian National University, where her research enables efficient design and optimization of technologies used to fight climate change: storing carbon dioxide in permeable underground geologic formations, and in cements used in construction.
Anna’s research is largely experimental, and is based on highly-resolved visualization of fluid (gas and liquid) flows within permeable media. She applies state-of-the-art visualization techniques to observe complicated 3D solid architecture and flow patterns, on a micro-scale basis, in otherwise opaque samples; and she uses image processing and mathematical topology to quantify fluid-solid structures and interactions. She recently produced the first experimental evidence that micro-scale fluid topology dictates reservoir-scale flow and transport parameters used by engineers. She also investigates how transport of fluids through samples can cause chemical reactions, altering solid surface chemistry and transforming solid structures over time; and she looks at how these reactive transport mechanisms can be manipulated to optimize flow processes in different natural and designed scenarios.
Email Address
anna.herring@anu.edu.au
Postal Address
Department of Materials Physics
Research School of Physics
The Australian National University
Website Address
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-9403-9779
Fields of Research
401199 - Environmental engineering not elsewhere classified;
410101 - Carbon sequestration science
Socio-Economic Objective
190301 - Climate change mitigation strategies
Status: Published
Published to:
Published to:
- Australian National University
- Australian National Data Service
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Segmented 3D images of supercritical CO2 dissolution into brine in Bentheimer sandstone tracked using X-ray micro-computed tomography [anudc:6173] - hasAssociationWith:
Segmented 3D Images of Supercritical CO2-Brine Draiange into Bentheimer Sandstones [anudc:6382] - isOwnerOf:
Processed 3D Tomographic Images of Repeated CO2 and Brine injections into Layered Bentheimer Sandstone [anudc:6155] - isPrincipalInvestigatorOf:
Processed 3D Tomographic Images of Repeated CO2 and Brine injections into Layered Bentheimer Sandstone [anudc:6155]