Dr Anubhav Dwivedi
Pronouns: He/Him
About
Anubhav Dwivedi is an Experimental Officer at the Global Centre for Clean Air Research (GCARE), University of Surrey. His work focuses on aerosol science, air quality, exposure assessment, and environmental monitoring, with particular emphasis on the measurement and characterisation of airborne particles and gaseous pollutants in indoor and outdoor environments. He supports the design and delivery of experimental studies, including laboratory chamber investigations, instrument calibration, field deployments, and data analysis for interdisciplinary research projects related to air pollution, ventilation, urban climate, and exposure mitigation.
His technical expertise includes the operation, calibration, and interpretation of data from advanced aerosol and air quality instruments. His work involves high-resolution measurement of particle number concentration, particle size distribution, black carbon, and environmental parameters, alongside the development of robust monitoring strategies for both controlled and real-world conditions.
Before joining Surrey, he held research positions at the University of Michigan, Aarhus University, Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, and Korea University. Across these roles, he has contributed to aerosol measurement science, bioaerosol and chamber-based experimentation, environmental system development, and applied research on airborne pollutant behaviour and transmission. His broader interests include aerosol dynamics, indoor air quality, airborne exposure, environmental sensing, and intervention-based approaches to improve air quality and public health.
My qualifications
Previous roles
ResearchResearch interests
Aerosol science, air quality monitoring, exposure assessment, indoor and outdoor air pollution, airborne transmission, environmental sensing, and urban sustainability.
Research projects
GP4StreetsGP4Streets is a research project focused on assessing how green infrastructure at street and household scales can improve air quality, thermal comfort, biodiversity, flooding resilience, and health and wellbeing in urban environments. The project combines field monitoring, sensor deployment, data analysis, and community engagement to evaluate the performance of practical greening interventions and support evidence-based urban design.
SMART-COAT: Sustainable Mitigation of Air Pollution and Resilience through Thermal-regulating COATingsSMART-COAT is focused on developing and evaluating multifunctional coatings designed to reduce air pollutants while improving thermal performance in the built environment. The project investigates pollutant degradation, particulate matter capture, and heat-mitigation potential through laboratory testing, environmental monitoring, and performance assessment under relevant climatic conditions.
MITIGATE FLUMITIGATE FLU focused on understanding and reducing airborne virus and pollutant transmission in indoor environments, particularly in occupied settings such as childcare spaces. The project involved aerosol measurements, experimental studies, ventilation assessment, and evaluation of mitigation strategies to reduce exposure risk and improve indoor air quality.
P3VentiP3Venti focused on understanding how ventilation and air purification strategies can reduce the spread of airborne viruses and pollutants in indoor environments. The project combined experimental measurements, aerosol science, and exposure assessment to evaluate interventions and support healthier indoor spaces.
Aerosol Transport Behaviour Experiments at National Aerosol Facility in Context of Nuclear Reactor AccidentsThis project investigated aerosol transport, deposition, and resuspension under controlled flow conditions relevant to nuclear reactor accident scenarios. The work involved aerosol generation, experimental studies in piping assemblies, particle characterisation, and analysis of transport behaviour to improve understanding of aerosol dynamics in engineered safety systems.
Measurement of aerosol and liquid droplet size distributions and validation of aerosol and droplet microphysical modelsThis project investigated aerosol and liquid droplet size distributions through experimental measurements and used the results to validate aerosol and droplet microphysical models. The study aimed to improve understanding of particle and droplet evolution processes by comparing observations with model predictions, thereby strengthening the reliability of microphysical descriptions used in aerosol and multiphase flow research.
Devic Earth Private Limited: Testing and Efficacy Evaluation of Pure Skies under Different Temperature, Humidity, Wind Speed, and Distance ConditionsThis project investigated the efficacy of Pure Skies under controlled variations in temperature, relative humidity, wind speed, and distance. The study involved experimental testing and environmental measurements to assess performance sensitivity to changing atmospheric and dispersion-related conditions, with the aim of understanding its effectiveness across a range of operational scenarios.
Research collaborations
Active research collaborations with the University of Michigan (USA), Aarhus University (Denmark), Utrecht University (Netherlands), Korea University (South Korea), Rutherford Appleton Laboratory (UK), IITM Pune (India), University of Bath (UK), University of Bristol (UK), Imperial College London (UK), University of Birmingham (UK), Bhabha Atomic Research Centre (India), and industry and interdisciplinary partners in aerosol science, air quality, environmental monitoring, and exposure assessment.
Indicators of esteem
International research collaborations with leading universities and research institutions
Technical expertise in advanced aerosol and air quality instrumentation
Invited presentations at national and international conferences and academic events
Research interests
Aerosol science, air quality monitoring, exposure assessment, indoor and outdoor air pollution, airborne transmission, environmental sensing, and urban sustainability.
Research projects
GP4Streets is a research project focused on assessing how green infrastructure at street and household scales can improve air quality, thermal comfort, biodiversity, flooding resilience, and health and wellbeing in urban environments. The project combines field monitoring, sensor deployment, data analysis, and community engagement to evaluate the performance of practical greening interventions and support evidence-based urban design.
SMART-COAT is focused on developing and evaluating multifunctional coatings designed to reduce air pollutants while improving thermal performance in the built environment. The project investigates pollutant degradation, particulate matter capture, and heat-mitigation potential through laboratory testing, environmental monitoring, and performance assessment under relevant climatic conditions.
MITIGATE FLU focused on understanding and reducing airborne virus and pollutant transmission in indoor environments, particularly in occupied settings such as childcare spaces. The project involved aerosol measurements, experimental studies, ventilation assessment, and evaluation of mitigation strategies to reduce exposure risk and improve indoor air quality.
P3Venti focused on understanding how ventilation and air purification strategies can reduce the spread of airborne viruses and pollutants in indoor environments. The project combined experimental measurements, aerosol science, and exposure assessment to evaluate interventions and support healthier indoor spaces.
This project investigated aerosol transport, deposition, and resuspension under controlled flow conditions relevant to nuclear reactor accident scenarios. The work involved aerosol generation, experimental studies in piping assemblies, particle characterisation, and analysis of transport behaviour to improve understanding of aerosol dynamics in engineered safety systems.
This project investigated aerosol and liquid droplet size distributions through experimental measurements and used the results to validate aerosol and droplet microphysical models. The study aimed to improve understanding of particle and droplet evolution processes by comparing observations with model predictions, thereby strengthening the reliability of microphysical descriptions used in aerosol and multiphase flow research.
This project investigated the efficacy of Pure Skies under controlled variations in temperature, relative humidity, wind speed, and distance. The study involved experimental testing and environmental measurements to assess performance sensitivity to changing atmospheric and dispersion-related conditions, with the aim of understanding its effectiveness across a range of operational scenarios.
Research collaborations
Active research collaborations with the University of Michigan (USA), Aarhus University (Denmark), Utrecht University (Netherlands), Korea University (South Korea), Rutherford Appleton Laboratory (UK), IITM Pune (India), University of Bath (UK), University of Bristol (UK), Imperial College London (UK), University of Birmingham (UK), Bhabha Atomic Research Centre (India), and industry and interdisciplinary partners in aerosol science, air quality, environmental monitoring, and exposure assessment.
Indicators of esteem
International research collaborations with leading universities and research institutions
Technical expertise in advanced aerosol and air quality instrumentation
Invited presentations at national and international conferences and academic events
Teaching
Teaching and supervision support in aerosol science, air quality, environmental monitoring, and experimental methods.
Teaching contributions
- Atmospheric Modelling
- Aerosol Science
- Air Quality and Exposure
- Numerical Methods
- Environmental Monitoring
- Indoor Air Quality
- Exposure Assessment
- Water and Wastewater Engineering
Engineering Drawing
Sustainable development goals
My research interests are related to the following:
Publications
While outdoor urban greening is recognised for its benefits, indoor green infrastructure (iGI) in shaping indoor environmental quality (IEQ) - including air quality, thermal comfort, and bioaerosols - remains underexplored. This ten-question paper identifies key challenges, opportunities, and research gaps in the iGI-IEQ nexus, organised under 10 questions across five thematic clusters: (1) biophysical and technical performance; (2) ecological and microbiological dynamics; (3) human health and wellbeing; (4) equity, access, and socio-economic factors; and (5) implementation and systems integration. Findings indicate that iGI can improve air quality, regulate humidity, and enhance thermal comfort. However, its performance depends strongly on plant density, species selection, and ventilation. Most evidence comes from controlled settings. iGI may offer positive psychological and cognitive benefits, and can reduce health inequalities through affordable indoor interventions. However, significant data scarcity exists for long-term field studies, indoor microbial ecosystem effects, and socio-economic accessibility. Widespread adoption of iGI requires quantification of proven benefit conditions, followed by overcoming technical, operational, and regulatory barriers via adaptive design, digital monitoring, and interdisciplinary collaboration. As a culminating synthesis, this study introduces a newly developed comprehensive matrix that classifies twenty-six indoor greening types across twenty IEQ parameters, incorporating an assessment of current data confidence. This matrix lays a foundational framework for informed decision-making and design guidance. This review offers evidence-based insights for researchers, policymakers, and practitioners to effectively leverage iGI where suitable, in creating healthier, climate-resilient residential and commercial buildings, addressing both immediate IEQ challenges and supporting long-term sustainability objectives.
Green and blue infrastructure (GBI) is emerging as a key strategy for climate adaptation and urban resilience, yet its implementation often faces critical contextual barriers. This review initially screened over 29,000 publications, ultimately synthesising more than 500 relevant studies supplemented by diverse expert input. The result is a novel integrative framework connects previously siloed knowledge and consolidates 21 underexplored barriers across four key domains of GBI implementation: environmental, social, economic, and governance/policy. Environmental barriers include conflicts between GBI and renewable energy goals, specifically photovoltaics, unintended consequences of GBI (such as allergenic pollen production), urban ventilation disruption, and vulnerability of plant species to multiple urban stressors. Effective responses include thoughtful allocation and integration of photovoltaics and GBI, developing context-specific frameworks combining ecological knowledge with technological innovation, fostering cross-disciplinary collaboration across technical and social domains, science-based species selection and implementing multi-scalar strategies that enhance ecological connectivity. Social barriers encompass environmental injustice, cultural disconnection, limited public adoption, safety concerns, and aesthetic preferences favouring manicured over ecologically functional landscapes. These challenges highlight the need for participatory design, culturally responsive planning, and inclusive resource allocation to strengthen community engagement and long-term stewardship. Economic barriers stem from biodiversity undervaluation, inadequate asset recognition in accounting frameworks, incomplete cost-benefit analyses, and limited private investment. Innovative financing tools like green bonds and debt-for-nature swaps offer promising mechanisms for resilient financing, while standardised natural capital accounting frameworks can better capture GBI's multifunctional value. Governance barriers include land scarcity, urban design limitations, policy fragmentation, and disconnects with other urban agendas like walkability. Overcoming these requires institutional realignment, cross-sectoral collaboration, and integrated spatial planning. The review unifies these findings into 12 actionable recommendations to support holistic decision-making, emphasising that effective GBI implementation demands context-specific strategies combining innovation, inclusive governance, and long-term stewardship to mainstream GBI in sustainable urban development. [Display omitted]
Additional publications
- Kumar, P., Sun, H., Biswal, A., Dwivedi, A.K., Cheung, H.Y.W., Bhui, K., Morawska, L., et al. (2026). Ten Questions on Indoor Greening and Environmental Quality. Building and Environment, 294, 114336.
DOI: 10.1016/j.buildenv.2026.114336 - Kumar, P., Corada Perez, K., Biswal, A., Sun, H., Dwivedi, A.K., Hama, S., Khalili, S., et al. (2025). Overlooked Considerations in Prescribing Green and Blue Infrastructure Solutions for Urban Environments. The Innovation, 101184.
DOI: 10.1016/j.xinn.2025.101184 - Kumar, M., Joshi, M., Dwivedi, A.K., Kumar, S., Saud, T., Khan, A., Mishra, G., et al. (2025). Study of the deposition and resuspension phase of aerosol particles in a straight test pipe. Frontiers in Nuclear Engineering, 4, 1617991.
DOI: 10.3389/fnuen.2025.1617991 - Lim, S., Bae, M.S., Jang, J., Dwivedi, A.K., Gil, J., Kim, J.A., Lee, M., et al. (2025). Exploring fine-aerosol episodes in urban Seoul during the cold season of the 2021 SIJAQ campaign: Measurement evidences of heterogeneous reactions on black carbon particles. Atmospheric Environment, 342, 120926.
DOI: 10.1016/j.atmosenv.2024.120926 - Ma, Z., Dwivedi, A.K. and Clack, H.L. (2024). Effects of chemically-reductive trace gas contaminants on non-thermal plasma inactivation of an airborne virus. Science of the Total Environment, 939, 173447.
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.173447 - Kumar, S., Mishra, G., Kumar, M., Dwivedi, A.K., Saud, T., Khan, A., Sapra, B.K., et al. (2022). Response of PDPA to optical materials and thickness of test section window. Measurement, 197, 111317.
DOI: 10.1016/j.measurement.2022.111317 - Mishra, G., Ghosh, K., Dwivedi, A.K., Kumar, M., Kumar, S., Chintalapati, S., and Tripathi, S.N. (2021). An application of probability density function for the analysis of PM2.5 concentration during the COVID-19 lockdown period. Science of the Total Environment, 782, 146681.
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.146681 - Dwivedi, A.K., Kumar, M., Mishra, G., Joshi, M., Khan, A., Tripathi, S.N., et al. (2020). Optimization of controlling parameters of plasma torch aerosol generator and characteristics of synthesized metal oxide aerosols in context of NAF program. Progress in Nuclear Energy, 123, 103311.
DOI: 10.1016/j.pnucene.2020.103311 - Dwivedi, A.K., Khan, A., Tripathi, S.N., Joshi, M., Mishra, G., Nath, D., Tiwari, N., and Sapra, B.K. (2019). Aerosol depositional characteristics in piping assembly under varying flow conditions. Progress in Nuclear Energy, 116, 148–157.
DOI: 10.1016/j.pnucene.2019.04.007 - Mishra, S.K., Saha, N., Dwivedi, A.K., Dalai, R., and co-authors (2017). Morphology, Mineralogy and Mixing of Individual Atmospheric Particles Over Kanpur (IGP): Relevance of Homogeneous Equivalent Sphere Approximation in Radiative Models. MAPAN.
DOI: 10.1007/s12647-017-0215-7 - Misra, A., Gaur, A., Tripathi, S.N., Dwivedi, A.K., and co-authors (2014). An Overview of the Physico-Chemical Characteristics of Dust at Kanpur in the Central Indo-Gangetic Basin. Atmospheric Environment, 97, 386–396.
DOI: 10.1016/j.atmosenv.2014.08.043 - Ghosh, S., Gupta, T., Rastogi, N., Gaur, A., Misra, A., Tripathi, S.N., Paul, D., et al. (2014). Chemical Characterization of Summertime Dust Events at Kanpur: Insight into the Sources and Level of Mixing with Anthropogenic Emissions. Aerosol and Air Quality Research, 14, 879–891.
DOI: 10.4209/aaqr.2013.07.0240 - Srivastava, M., Tripathi, S.N., Dwivedi, A.K., Dalai, R., Bhattu, D., Bharti, P.K., Jaidevi, J., and Gupta, T. (2013). CCN closure results from Indian Continental Tropical Convergence Zone (CTCZ) aircraft experiment. Atmospheric Research, 132–133, 322–331.
DOI: 10.1016/j.atmosres.2013.05.025