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Students test one way to combat extreme heat in Philadelphia

Third-year students Nafisa Bangura and Angelica Dadda expanded upon a multidisciplinary research endeavor to evaluate a reflective pavement coating as a tool to mitigate extreme heat. Their work may inform policy efforts to improve urban heat resilience.

September 29, 2025
Nafisa Bangura (left) and Angelica Dadda (right) doing hands-on experimental work in the Composto Lab.

In fall 2024, a team of undergraduates in the Composto Soft Matter Laboratory (Composto Lab) launched a cross-disciplinary project testing the efficacy of a pavement coating designed to reduce surface temperatures in neighborhoods affected by extreme heat. Nafisa Bangura and Angelica Dadda, both third-years in the School of Engineering and Applied Science (SEAS), took the lead this summer as part of the Penn Undergraduate Research Mentoring Program (PURM).

The CoolSeal project—kickstarted by a grant from Penn’s Environmental Innovation Initiative to Russell Composto, professor of materials science and engineering in SEAS and Penn’s vice provost for undergraduate education, and Kristin Field, director of education at The Internet of Things for Precision Agriculture—involves collaborators from SEAS, the City of Philadelphia’s Office of Sustainability, and the Weitzman School of Design. Pioneered by third-year Julia Chiang and fourth-year Colby Snyder, this project to help address urban heating aligns with Penn’s strategic framework In Principle and Practice by promoting multidisciplinary pursuits, supporting local communities, and leading on pivotal climate-related challenges. Read more within Penn Today.

Source:
Penn Today
Topics:
Climate
Sustainability
Urban