Licina received a B.Sc. in 2008 and a M.Sc. in 2010 in Mechanical Engineering from the
University of Belgrade. During this time, he specialized in studying
heating, ventilation, and air-Conditioning (HVAC) systems. In 2015, he received a joint
Ph.D. from the
National University of Singapore (School of Design and Environment) and the
Technical University of Denmark (International Centre for Indoor Environment and Energy). His Ph.D. thesis, titled "Human convective boundary layer and its impact on personal exposure," contributed to the improved understanding of airflow characteristics around the human body, personal exposure to airborne pollutants indoors, and ventilation control.[3]
Career
Upon completing his Ph.D., Licina moved to the
University of California, Berkeley as a
postdoctoral researcher in the group of William W. Nazaroff.[4][failed verification] During his postdoctoral career, Licina focused on investigating sources and transport of air pollutants in buildings and inhalation exposure assessment.[5] He then served as the director of the standard development team at the International WELL Building Institute (IWBI) in New York. During this time, he led the development of the air and thermal comfort concepts within the WELL v2 green building certification standard, a global standard for healthy buildings in more than 65 countries.[6]
Licina joined EPFL in June 2018 as a
tenure-trackassistant professor of
indoor environmental quality at the School for Architecture, Civil, and Environmental Engineering (ENAC), and has since served as director of the Human-Oriented Built Environment Laboratory at
EPFL, also part of the Smart Living Lab and located in
Fribourg.[1][2]
Research
Some of Licina’s notable research contributions include understanding of contributions of human skin and clothing to the concentration and diversity of indoor chemicals and particulate matter, including bioaerosols,[7][8] and their contribution to indoor inhalation burden.[9][10]
Licina is the recipient of the
Ralph G. Nevins award by the American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE).[12][13] His research group's work yielded three conference awards at the Healthy Building 2021.[14] He is an editorial board member of the Indoor Air and Atmosphere journals.[15][16]
He has frequently appeared in media outlets, for example, during the
COVID-19 pandemic as an expert on airborne pathogen transmission mechanisms on the
Swiss television RTS,[17] in the Swiss newspaper
20 min,[18] on the new portal Heidi.News,[19] and on matters related to indoor air quality in Mirage News[20] and Tech Explorist.[21][22] He also gave a lecture on the April 2021 workshop series organized by the US National Academy of Sciences on the state-of-the-science on exposure to
PM2.5 indoors, its health impacts and engineering approaches, and interventions to reduce exposure risks, including practical mitigation solutions in residential settings.[23]
Licina, Dusan; Pantelic, Jovan; Melikov, Arsen; Sekhar, Chandra; Tham, Kwok Wai (2014). "Experimental investigation of the human convective boundary layer in a quiescent indoor environment". Building and Environment. 75: 79–91.
doi:
10.1016/j.buildenv.2014.01.016.