Prof. douglas Collins

Assistant Professor of Chemistry  |  Bucknell University

dbc007 AT bucknell.edu

Bucknell Faculty Profile Curriculum Vitae

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Education:

Prof. Collins graduated from Colgate University in 2008, where he studied chemistry with a minor in geology and filled much of his remaining schedule with environmental studies coursework and research on atmospheric aerosol chemistry. After a brief stint at the University of New Hampshire, Prof. Collins earned graduate degrees under the guidance of Prof. Kimberly Prather at the University of California, San Diego. Upon completing his PhD in 2014, he became a laboratory manager and Managing Director for the Center for Aerosol Impacts on Chemistry of the Environment (CAICE). In 2016, Dr. Collins began working as a postdoctoral fellow in the laboratory of Prof. Jonathan Abbatt at the University of Toronto, where he at first worked on Arctic atmospheric aerosols aboard the research icebreaker CCGS Amundsen as part of the NETCARE research network and then moved on to studies of the multiphase chemistry of indoor environments with the IndoorChem community. In 2018, Prof. Collins moved to Lewisburg to join the Bucknell University faculty as an Assistant Professor of Chemistry. 

Building on his scientific background, Prof. Collins' current research uses advanced mass spectrometry approaches to investigate chemistry that occurs on air-exposed interfaces. His group has been working on fundamental chemistry projects inspired by built environments (chemicals of emerging concern, air cleaning, human surfaces, and disinfection) and the air-sea interface. The research group is broadly interested in exploring the interface between the biosphere and atmosphere, including an ongoing collaborative chemical ecology study about how fireflies chemically communicate using volatile chemicals and organic surface coatings.