Dr. Brett
Stanley
Professor
Brett Stanley received
a B.S. at the University of Pittsburgh in 1987 and a Ph.D. in analytical chemistry
from Utah State University in 1992. He was a postdoctoral research associate
at the University of Tennessee (1992-94), and performed work at the Oak Ridge
National Laboratory on the measurement and characterization of adsorption
with chromatographic techniques.
Dr. Stanley is an analytical chemist with specialization in the surface chemistry and modeling of column chromatography. He currently has 16 publications in seven journals on his research in analytical and physical chemistry. His research is currently evaluating the fundamental basis of peak asymmetry in reversed-phase high performance liquid chromatography. He also is interested in environmental chemistry, including water quality, contamination and purification, and is a member of the faculty advisory council of the Water Resources Institute at CSUSB.
Dr. Stanley teaches general education/general chemistry courses (Chem 100, 105 and 205), the introductory and advanced analytical chemistry courses (Chem 245 and 545), a special topic course in environmental chemistry (Chem 500), and supervises independent student projects (Chem 295, 501 and 595).
Dr. Stanley is a member of the American Chemical Society, Phi Kappa Phi, the Council on Undergraduate Research, the California Separation Science Society, and Sigma Xi.
Dr. Stanley's outside interests include sports, outdoor activities such as hiking, mountain biking, fishing and camping, and music (especially that good ol' rock-n-roll!).
