Lucía Reig holds degrees in Technical Architecture and Materials Engineering from Universitat Politècnica de València (UPV, Spain) and doctorate in Mechanical and Materials Engineering from the UPV. She is a Full Professor of the Technical Architecture degree at the Universitat Jaume I de Castelló (Spain) and focuses her teaching on the field of materials and construction systems. She has published several scientific articles, both in the field of the development of porous titanium to reduce its stiffness (subject of her doctoral thesis) and the development of low-CO2 cements and the reuse of ceramic waste to develop new construction materials, a field in which her current research mainly focuses. She has carried out postdoctoral research stays at the University of Bath (United Kingdom) and the Universidade Estadual Paulista, Ilha Solteira campus (state of Sao Paulo, Brazil), during which she developed sustainable conglomerating matrices and concrete to reduce the effect of construction on global warming.
Research Keywords & Expertise
Cement
Ceramic Materials
Mechanical Properties
Microstructure
sustainabilitiy
Low CO2 binders
Recycled Aggregate Con...
Fingerprints
40%
Cement
37%
Microstructure
13%
Mechanical Properties
10%
Recycled Aggregate Concrete (RCA)
5%
Ceramic Materials
Short Biography
Lucía Reig holds degrees in Technical Architecture and Materials Engineering from Universitat Politècnica de València (UPV, Spain) and doctorate in Mechanical and Materials Engineering from the UPV. She is a Full Professor of the Technical Architecture degree at the Universitat Jaume I de Castelló (Spain) and focuses her teaching on the field of materials and construction systems. She has published several scientific articles, both in the field of the development of porous titanium to reduce its stiffness (subject of her doctoral thesis) and the development of low-CO2 cements and the reuse of ceramic waste to develop new construction materials, a field in which her current research mainly focuses. She has carried out postdoctoral research stays at the University of Bath (United Kingdom) and the Universidade Estadual Paulista, Ilha Solteira campus (state of Sao Paulo, Brazil), during which she developed sustainable conglomerating matrices and concrete to reduce the effect of construction on global warming.