Ranjana Ray Chaudhuri is a civil and environmental engineer by training and has a PhD in Hydrology from TERISAS. She has over 27 years of experience in industry and academics. She has worked on infrastructure projects involving feasibility studies, design, evaluation and tender preparation for water treatment plants, wastewater treatment plants, engineered landfills, stormwater drainage plans, environment management systems and hill development projects. As a faculty member, she teaches courses in hydrology, irrigation water management, integrated watershed and river basin management, ground water hydrology and management and urban water and wastewater. Her areas of interest include water resource planning, urban water system, extreme events, watershed hydrology, sustainable cities and analysis of hydrologic systems including predictions.
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Publications:
- Ray Chaudhuri, R. and Sharma, P. (2020).“Addressing Uncertainty in Extreme Rainfall Intensity for semi-arid urban Regions: Case study of Delhi, India ” Natural Hazards,104.2307-2324 Springer. DOI : 10.1007/s11069-020-04273-5
- Ray Chaudhuri, R. and Sharma, P. (2021). “An integrated stochastic approach for extreme rainfall analysis in the National Capital Region of India” J. Earth Syst. Sci. (2021) 130:16 Indian Academy of Sciences. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12040-020-01510-0
- Ranjana Ray Chaudhuri, Prateek Sharma, Arun Kansal (2021). “Reducing the water footprint of megacities in Asia: Addressing water reuse and groundwater recharge -Case study of Delhi”, accepted as book chapter to be published in the volume on urbanization in the Global south, Routledge publishers. ISBN 9780367553906 DOI: 10.4324/9781003093282
- Mudasir Ahmad, Kaiser Manzoor, Ranjana Ray Chaudhuri, Saiqa Ikram, 2017, American Chemical Society 62 (7), pp 2044–2055, DOI: 10.1021/acs.jced.7b00088
- Ranjana Ray Chaudhuri, 2017, Treated Wastewater Reuse-Need of the Hour, American Water Works Association-India Conference
- Ranjana Ray Chaudhuri, Syed Wamiq Ali Qazi, Shashank Pandey, 2017, Influence of urbanization on soil infiltration rates-a case study, Urban India, Vol37(II)