Jay is awarded the Researcher Mobility Grant

Jay Bullen, Cohort 3 student was recently awarded a Researcher Mobility Grant of £2500 from the Royal Society of Chemistry […]

Jay Bullen, Cohort 3 student was recently awarded a Researcher Mobility Grant of £2500 from the Royal Society of Chemistry to develop an opensource, Arduino based electrochemical system for measuring toxic arsenic in drinking water. In collaboration with the charity Caminos de Agua based in Guanajuato, Mexico, this project aims to provide cheap and accurate determination of arsenic contamination on a system costing just $100.

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Nadir Basma

What differentiates the CDT ACM is the increased familiarity with facilities, techniques, and academic groups gained from working between the two partner universities.