Norma A. Alcantar

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Born
Mexico City, Mexico
EducationBSc, chemical engineering, 1993
PhD, chemical engineering, 2000, University of California, Santa Barbara
Norma A. Alcantar
Born
Mexico City, Mexico
Academic background
EducationBSc, chemical engineering, 1993
PhD, chemical engineering, 2000, University of California, Santa Barbara
Academic work
InstitutionsUniversity of South Florida

Norma A. Alcantar is a Mexican–American chemical engineer. She is a professor in the Department of Chemical Engineering and Biomedical Engineering at the University of South Florida. In 2019, Alcantar was elected a fellow of the American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering for "outstanding contributions in providing drinking water for low-income communities and contributions to disrupting amyloid fibril formation in Alzheimer's research".

Alcantar was born and raised in Mexico City, Mexico.[1] She became interested in chemical engineering during her childhood in Mexico. While growing up, she helped her grandmother bring river water to the family farm. If the water was contaminated, her grandmother taught her to boil it with part of a cactus plant.[2] After completing her Bachelor of Science degree in chemical engineering in 1993, Alcantar was awarded an abroad fellowship to earn her master's degree and PhD at the University of California, Santa Barbara (UCSB).[1]

Career

References

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