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Professor Nicholas Frederick Gray

Fellow Emeritus (Botany)

 

Fellow Emeritus (Trinity Centre for the Environment)

Fellow Emeritus (Civil Struct & Env. Eng.)

Professor Nick Gray has worked primarily in the area of biological wastewater treatment for thirty years, working mainly on full-scale treatment systems both here and abroad. The prime focus of his work is the design and operation of reactor processes. The work has been published in over 180 scientific publications and in a number of research monographs. For example 'The Biology of Wastewater Treatment' (1989) and 'Activated Sludge: Theory and Practice' (1990) both published by Oxford University Press, contain significant amounts of previously unpublished work including a new operational control alogrithm containing 164 steps in the latter. 'Biology of Wastewater Treatment' became hugely popular in spite of its size (829 pages) and was revised in 1992. A new edition, published by Imperial College Press in London in 2004, expanded the original text to 1420 pages, 'a remarkable undertaking for a single author' Nature. Work on river pollution control has always run in parallel to the his work on wastewater treatment. In the 1980's organic pollution and sewage fungus growths in rivers was a major problem in Ireland. Fundamental work by Professor Gray led to a greater understanding of the formation and control of such microbial communities leading to collaborations with workers as far away as New Zealand. The work, carried out over a five-year period, was brought together in Biological Reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society in 1985. His work for the Standing Committee of Analysts (UK) focussed on water quality assessment leading to new standard methods and contributions to new European standards and legislation. This has also included contributions on microbial and chemical water quality testing and assessment. A third Biological Review (1995) dealt with treatability, toxicity and biodegradability test methods. Since 1994 work has focussed on unravelling the problems caused by the abandoned pyrite and copper mines at Avoca in County Wicklow, which has destroyed the River Avoca through the discharge of acid mine drainage. Through a series of papers and refereed reports the Avoca site has become and important benchmark site and is visited by other workers in this field from throughout the world. During the 1990's he produced a number of new texts including the popular book 'Drinking water quality: problems and solutions' published by John Wiley and Sons in 1994 and translated into Spanish in 1996. This book was expanded and updated in 2008 and published by Cambridge University Press. 'The Coliform index and waterborne disease: problems of microbial drinking water assessment' written with Clara Gleeson published by E. & F.N. Spon, London in 1997 proved highly controversial at the time and heralded subsequent changes in testing protocols. He is also author of the textbook 'Water Technology' (1999) co-published by Arnold and Wiley. Butterworth-Heinemann published a revised version in 2002 with an expanded second edition published in 2005 by Elsevier. This new edition will also be released in Russian in 2009. An expanded third edition was published in 2010 which is also available in chinese. A new edition was published in 2017 under the new title Water Science and Technology: An Introduction. With a strong commitment to both research and training he started a research group in 1982 Water Technology Research. Under this umbrella training workshops were held both in Ireland and Italy. It also fronted an active consultancy service that underpinned his research throughout the 1980's and to the mid 1990's. His current interests focus on the microbial reactions in activated sludge with an increasing proportion of his time spent on looking at ways in which society will cope with a post climate change environment. His ideas on the climate crisis was published as a monograph Facing Up to Global Warming: What is Going on and How You Can Make a Difference? Published in 2015 by Springer.
  Acid mine drainage   ACTIVATED SLUDGE   Carbon footprinting   Drinking water quality   Environmental biotechnology   Environmental Engineering   Environmental Impacts   Environmental Indicators, Monitoring, Risk Assessment   Environmental planning and sustainable development   FOAMS   Greenhouse gas emission assessment   METALS   Microbial ecology   MINE MANAGEMENT   Percolating (trickling) filters   PHARMACEUTICAL WASTEWATER   PHARMACEUTICAL WASTEWATERS   Process Engineering   REED-BED   River pollution   RIVER SUBSTRATE   Sanitary Engineering   Sanitary Engineering, Environmental Impacts   Sewage sludge   SEWAGE-TREATMENT PLANTS   SLUDGE STABILISATION   SMALL SEWAGE-TREATMENT WORKS   SUBSTANCES   TOXICANTS   Unit Operations Engineering   Waste water treatment   WATER   Water engineering   Water Monitoring, Quality, Treatment   Water Quality   Water Supply   Water Treatment   WETLANDS
Details Date
Standing Committee of Analysts, Department of the Environment, London. 1988
Royal Irish Academy National Committee for Hydrobiology. 1987
Member of the Soviet Working Group on National Water Protection based at Rostov-on-Don. 1986
Committee of the Institution of Water and Environmental Management 1988
External Examiner for undergraduate and postgraduate courses: B.Sc. Environmental Science and Technology, Cambourne School of Mines, University of Exeter; M.Sc. Water and Wastewater Engineering, Water Pollution Technology, Water and Wastewater Technology, University of Cranfield; M.Sc.(Eng) Water Engineering and Project Management, University of Leeds.
Reviewer: Annals of Applied Biology: Chemosphere; Environmental Enginering Science; Freshwater Ecology; Journal of Applied Ecology; Journal of Environmental Science and Health (Part A); Journal of Hazardous Materials; Environmental Geochemistry and Health; International Journal of Food Science and Technology; Oikos; Plant and Soil; Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy; Process Biochemistry; Science of the Total Environment; Soil Biology and Biochemistry; Water Science and Technology; Water Research etc.
Details Date From Date To
F.L.S. (Fellow of the Linnean Society of London) 1976
M.I.W.P.C. (Corportae Member of the Institute of Water Pollution Control) 1976
M.I.Biol. (Member of the Insitute of Biology) 1979
M.I.W.E.S. (Corporate Member of the Institution of Water Engineers and Scientists) 1981
C. Biol. (Chartered Biologist) 1984
Member of the Soviet Insitute of Geochemistry and Cosmochemistry. 1986
M.C.I.W.E.M. (Corporate Member of the Chartered Institution of Water and Environmental Management) 1987
Member of the National Academy of Science, New York. 1999
F.I.Biol. (Fellow of the Institute of Biology) 2004
Fellow of the Royal Society of Biology (FRSB) 2014 Present
Gray, Nicholas Frederick, Activated Sludge: Developments and Sustainable Solutions, First, London, World Scientific, 2023, 1 - 607pp, Book, PUBLISHED  URL
Nicholas F Gray, Natural Wastewater Treatment Systems and Sustainability , First, Singapore, World Scientific Publishing, 2021, 1 - 524pp, Notes: [https://doi.org/10.1142/q0320], Book, PUBLISHED  URL
Gray Nicholas F., Fixed-Film Reactors in Wastewater Treatment, First, Singapore, World Scientific Publishing, 2020, 1 - 300pp, Book, PUBLISHED
Gray, N.F. , Taking control of carbon emissions: Implementing personal action., First, Ireland, Tigroney Press, 2018, 1 - 22pp, Book, PUBLISHED  URL
Gray, Nicholas Frederick, Driving Sustainably: A Guide to reducing your carbon footprint, First, Ireland, Tigroney Press, 2018, 1 - 20pp, Notes: [http://hdl.handle.net/2262/85300], Book, PUBLISHED  URL
Gray, N.F., Drinking Water Quality: Problems and Solutions. , eBook, Cambridge, England, Cambridge University Press, 2018, 1 - 749pp, Book, PUBLISHED  URL
Gray, Nicholas Frederick, Water Science and Technology: An Introduction, 4, Oxford, CRC Press, 2017, 680pp, Book, PUBLISHED
Gray, N.F., Facing up to Global Warming: What is Going on and How You can Make a Difference?, New York, Springer, 2015, 1 - 406pp, Notes: [DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-20146-7], Book, PUBLISHED
Gray, N.F., Drinking Water Quality: Problems and Solutions, Turkey, Nobel Akademik Yayincilik , 2015, 1 - 725pp, Book, PUBLISHED
Chapter 17. Capillary Suction Time (CST). in, editor(s)Steve Tarleton , Filtration and Separation, Oxford, Academic Press, 2015, pp659 - 670, [Gray, N.F.], Book Chapter, PUBLISHED
  

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Award Date
Who's Who in Science 2001-present
Who's Who in the World 1999-present
Sc.D. (Higher Doctorate in Science for published work 1979-89) 1991
F.T.C.D. (Elected to Fellowship of Trinity College, Dublin) 1985
Fellow Institute of Biology; Royal Society of Biology 2004
Professor Nick Gray has worked primarily in the area of biological wastewater treatment for thirty years, working mainly on full-scale treatment systems both here and abroad. The prime focus of his work is the design and operation of reactor processes. Key areas include: optimization of percolating filters, bulking and foaming control in activated sludge systems, aerobic digestion, treatment of pharmaceutical wastewaters, the use of the micro-biota in operational management, and the decontamination and disposal of sewage sludge. Work on river pollution control has always run in parallel to his work on wastewater treatment. Key areas include: biological monitoring of rivers pollution impact analysis; sewage fungus control; sediment processes and acid mine drainage. With a strong commitment to both research and training he started a research group in 1982 Water Technology Research. Under this umbrella training workshops were held both in Ireland and Italy. It also fronted an active consultancy service that underpinned his research throughout the 1980's and to the mid 1990's. "I am afraid I have not doggedly followed a set path of research, restricting myself to a single concept or set of inter-related hypotheses. I have been unashamedly self-indulgent following the routes that have interested me the most. I have worked in many other areas of environmental sciences including agriculture, countryside management, catchment management, transportation, nematophagous fungi etc. So although I am primarily an environmental engineer, I am also an active environmental scientist." His current interests focus on the microbial reactions in activated sludge with an increasing proportion of his time spent on looking at ways in which society will cope with a post climate change environment.