Theses

Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://uwspace.uwaterloo.ca/handle/10012/6

The theses in UWSpace are publicly accessible unless restricted due to publication or patent pending.

This collection includes a subset of theses submitted by graduates of the University of Waterloo as a partial requirement of a degree program at the Master's or PhD level. It includes all electronically submitted theses. (Electronic submission was optional from 1996 through 2006. Electronic submission became the default submission format in October 2006.)

This collection also includes a subset of UW theses that were scanned through the Theses Canada program. (The subset includes UW PhD theses from 1998 - 2002.)

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  • Item type: Item ,
    How to Color Graphs, and How Not to Chase Pointers
    (University of Waterloo, 2026-05-15) Mittal, Parth
    We present several results in the graph streaming and number-in-hand communication models. In the graph streaming model, the edges of the input graph stream by one-by-one, and the algorithm must process this stream with limited memory, which is significantly smaller than required to store the entire graph. Brooks' Theorem states that a graph with maximum degree Δ can be Δ-colored as long as it is not a clique or an odd-cycle. We show a 1-pass, O(n polylog(n)) space algorithm that can Δ-color a graph given as a stream. This is optimal up to log n factors. In the number-in-hand communication model, the input to some relation is partitioned between k players, who work together to compute an output to the relation while minimizing the number of bits they communicate to each other. We have three results in this model. First, we show an O(n) communication protocol that can (Δ + 1)-color a graph, whose edges are partitioned between two players. This is optimal up to constant factors. Our second and third results are about the pointer chasing problem. In the pointer chasing problem, two players receive functions from [n] → [n], and wish to find the sequence of elements of [n] obtained by applying their functions alternately k times on the starting element 1. We show that any k / 1000 round communication protocol that solves this task must use Ω(n) communication. This lower bound is optimal up to factors of log n. We also show an optimal lower bound for any (k - 1) round protocol that solves a version of this problem where each value of the input functions is further obscured behind a set intersection instance.
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    Forage Crop Productivity and Nutrient Use Efficiency on Newly Converted Boreal Podzolic Soils in Central Labrador
    (University of Waterloo, 2026-05-15) Dhindsa, Aman
    Climate change is driving agricultural expansion into Canada’s boreal north, however, the sandy acidic, and nutrient poor Podzolic soils resulting from forest-to-farmland conversion remain severely under studied for their capacity to support crop production. This study evaluated the effects of soil fertility enhancing treatments, including nutrient sources; inorganic mineral fertilizer, organic marine waste (e.g., shrimp compost, shrimp waste, and fish meal), forage biomass incorporation, and liming agents/organic matter inputs; limestone, peat moss, their combination, and biochar, on forage crops (e.g., oat, pea, and oat-pea intercrop). Yields, nutrient uptake, and nutrient use efficiency for N, P and K were evaluated across three boreal farmlands near Happy Valley-Goose Bay, Labrador, Canada. The three farmlands, Birch Lane (BL), Taiga Valley (TV), and Natures Best (NB), differed in conversion history, baseline soil fertility, and management, spanning a gradient from infertile, recently bulldozed mineral soil at TV to a moderately rehabilitated pasture under long‑term agricultural management at BL. Field experiments were conducted over two growing seasons (2023 and 2024) using randomized complete blocks with factorial design (factor 1: nutrient source, factor 2: liming agents/organic matter inputs). Results showed that forage crop yields and nutrient uptake for N, P, and K were influenced by both nutrient sources and liming agents/organic matter inputs applied (p<0.05), with the largest effects seen in the least fertile soils. While treatments were distinct but comparable across the three farms, forage responses were site specific, reflecting the overriding role of inherent soil fertility. In the longer-term managed BL field, inorganic and organic nutrient sources as well as application of limestone with peat, influenced yields, nutrient uptakes and nutrient use efficiencies (p<0.05). At BL, when shrimp compost was applied at similar N rates to the inorganic mineral fertilizer, shrimp compost produced higher yields. At the very recently converted TV, meaningful yields (above 1 t/ha) required the combined application of strong nutrient inputs with organic matter and acidity improving amendments (p<0.05). The application of hardwood biochar at TV, produced the highest yields and nutrient uptakes on the farm when paired with fish meal in the first year. At the intermediate fertility site NB, organic fertilizers, including shrimp compost and shrimp waste, performed similarly to inorganic mineral fertilizer, showing promise as locally useful organic marine waste by-products. Biomass incorporation contributed negligible available nutrients within a single season and did not improve yields above control. Nutrient use efficiency metrics revealed that high efficiencies were not solely a product of experimental soil inputs, but were likely influenced by inherent soil conditions, underscoring the importance of conversion history and cumulative land management on nutrient cycling in boreal agricultural soils. These findings provide evidence that northern boreal farms, such as those in Happy Valley-Goose Bay, can have agronomically meaningful forage crop production (5-7 t/ha) if soil fertility management is matched to site-specific constraints. The conversion history of these lands determines how intensive agricultural management must be to achieve crop productivity. As boreal agricultural development continues to expand in Newfoundland and Labrador and across northern Canada, this study highlights the importance of soil fertility management strategies that consider the interacting roles of nutrient supply, soil acidity, and organic matter status.
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    Development of Molecular-Pore-Containing Polymer Semiconductors via Thermal Side-Chain Cleavage for Enhanced Alcohol Vapor Sensing in Organic Thin-Film Transistors
    (University of Waterloo, 2026-05-15) Papazotos, Jimmy
    This work presents the development of a low detection-limit ethanol vapor sensor, operating as an organic thin-film transistor (OTFT). OTFTs have garnered much attention for their use in gas sensing applications; owing to their low-cost, relatively simple fabrication and ability to be deployed as miniaturized and wearable devices. As such, a series of polythiophenes were synthetized in this work with the aim of being the semiconductive channel material in ethanol vapor sensors. The materials were synthesized with various functionalized side chains – either thermally cleavable or stable in nature. The thermally cleavable sidechains (TCSs) are ester functionalities which can be removed and converted to carboxylic acids upon high temperature post-processing of the devices. The content of TCSs / thermally stable side chains within the polymers in the series were systematically altered to investigate their effect on sensing performance. It was found that complete side chain removal (owing to 100% use of TCSs) totally inhibits sensing performance due to collapse of the film morphology after post-processing. However, including thermally stable side chains in the polymer structure acts as a molecular scaffold and preserves film morphology after TCS removal. This imparts porosity into the thin-film, which facilitates analyte vapor diffusion into the sensing layer and consequently enhances the ethanol vapor sensitivity. A sensitivity increase of ~26% is observed after side chain removal in polymers containing molecular scaffolded structures, proving the formation of stable pores into the polymer films.
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    Anxiety disorder agreement among children with chronic physical illness and their parents
    (University of Waterloo, 2026-05-15) Parks, Reese
    Background: Assessment of child psychopathology using multiple informants provides a more comprehensive and accurate evaluation of child mental health; however, parent-child agreement is low-to-moderate in child psychiatry and tends to be lower for internalizing disorders. Children with chronic physical illness (CPI) are at an elevated risk of developing anxiety disorders, making accurate assessment especially important in this population. Despite this, longitudinal patterns and determinants of parent-child agreement in children with CPI remain underexplored. Objectives: The objectives of this thesis were to: (1) Estimate the magnitude of informant agreement for anxiety disorders on the Mini-International Neuropsychiatric Interview for Children and Adolescents (MINI-KID) between parents and children with CPI at baseline, 6, 12, 24, and 48 months, (2) Explore whether child sex moderates parent-child agreement, and (3) Identify sociodemographic and health factors associated with parent-child disagreement for anxiety disorders on the MINI-KID over time. Methods: Data for 119 dyads came from the Multimorbidity in Youth Across the Life-course (MY LIFE) study, a longitudinal study of children aged 2 to 16 years who had been diagnosed with a CPI and their primary caregiver. The prevalence-adjusted bias-adjusted kappa (PABAK) estimated the magnitude of agreement between parents and children with CPI at baseline, 6, 12, 24, and 48 months. Sex-stratified agreement analyses were conducted using the PABAK to investigate whether parent-child agreement was moderated by child sex. The method of variance estimates recovery (MOVER) was used to construct a confidence interval for the difference in κ estimates between male and female children at each timepoint. A generalized estimating equations model examined factors associated with parent-child disagreement over time. Results: Agreement ranged from fair to substantial over time (κ = 0.40-0.65). For male children, agreement was moderate to almost perfect (κ = 0.47-0.82), whereas for female children, fair to moderate agreement was observed (κ = 0.32-0.51). Moderation by child sex was only found at 6 and 48 months. Compared to baseline, time at 6 months (OR = 0.46, 95% CI = 0.23-0.91, p = 0.026) and 12 months (OR = 0.55, 95% CI = 0.31-0.97, p = 0.040) were associated with lower odds of disagreement. Female children were found to have significantly higher odds of disagreement compared to male children (OR = 2.04, 95% CI = 1.20-3.46, p = 0.008). Parents who were not partnered had lower odds of disagreement relative to partnered parents (OR = 0.27, 95% CI = 0.10-0.71, p = 0.008). Higher levels of parent psychopathology were also associated with increased odds of disagreement (OR = 1.15, 95% CI = 1.01-1.31, p = 0.032). Conclusion: Parent-child agreement ranged from low-to-substantial and varied over time. Moderation by child sex was only evident at 6 and 48 months. Predictors of parent-child disagreement may help identify dyads who may be at greater risk for informant discrepancies. Future research should examine the underlying mechanisms driving parent-child disagreement to inform targeted interventions that help strengthen agreement among parents and children with CPI.
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    Structural and Interfacial Engineering of 2,5-Dihydroxy-1,4-Benzoquinone Coordination-Polymer Cathodes for Sustainable Lithium-Ion Batteries
    (University of Waterloo, 2026-05-14) Wang, Yonglin
    Carbonyl-based organic compounds are one of the most promising sustainable cathode materials for next-generation lithium-ion batteries due to their highly reversible C=O redox center, high theoretical capacity, structural tunability, and potential derivation from abundant or biomass-related feedstocks. However, their practical deployment has been limited by intrinsically high solubility in conventional carbonate- and ether-based electrolytes. Dissolution-driven loss of active material not only leads to rapid capacity fading but also induces serious shuttle effect, self-discharge, and parasitic reactions. Therefore, suppressing dissolution is an essential prerequisite for achieving long-term stability and practical energy density in organic cathodes. Among various carbonyl-based candidates, 2,5-dihydroxy-1,4-benzoquinone (DHBQ) is attractive because of its high theoretical capacity (383 mAh g⁻¹), simple structure, and potential renewability. Yet DHBQ is highly soluble in common organic electrolytes, preventing stable cycling. In this thesis, coordination polymer (CP) synthesis was employed as the primary strategy to reduce the solubility of carbonyl-based cathodes. By incorporating redox-active quinone units into coordination frameworks, CP structures increase the energetic barrier for molecular detachment and solvation, thereby effectively suppressing dissolution. Moreover, CPs can be synthesized through relatively simple coordination reactions using accessible precursors, offering practical feasibility and potential scalability. In Chapter 3, a metastable quinone-based coordination polymer, Co-DHBQ·2H₂O, was investigated as a transition-metal-redox cathode. When cycled between 0.7–3.0 V, the electrodes undergo a reversible four-electron transfer process involving both DHBQ and Co redox reactions. Initial side reactions, including SEI formation and benzene-ring lithiation, lead to a high first-cycle capacity of 783 mAh g⁻¹. After stabilization, the cathode delivers 199 mAh g⁻¹ after 750 cycles, with 84% capacity retention between the 100th and 750th cycles. Structural analyses reveal that coordinated water molecules form strong hydrogen bonds (up to -40.5 kJ mol⁻¹) that stabilize the layered framework and preserve structural integrity during cycling. However, excessive lithiation at low voltages induces structural damage due to the metastable nature of the hydrogen-bonded layers. Comparative studies with anhydrous Co-DHBQ confirm that coordinated water is critical for maintaining structural integrity, enabling reversible Li⁺ accommodation, and achieving long-term electrochemical stability. In Chapter 4, a lithium-based, transition-metal-free Li₂DHBQ cathode was investigated to reduce mass penalty while maintaining low solubility. Although Li₂DHBQ exhibits extremely low solubility in the electrolyte, severe morphological degradation of the active material was identified as the primary origin of poor cycling stability. Repeated lithiation and delithiation induce particle fracture and progressive disruption of electronic percolation pathways, leading to capacity fading independent of dissolution effects. To address this issue, the discharge cutoff voltage was lowered to 0.5 V to promote electrolyte reduction and in situ formation of a protective solid electrolyte interphase (SEI) layer on the Li₂DHBQ surface. This strategy significantly enhanced morphological stability and improved electrochemical performance. When cycled between 0.5–3.0 V at 500 mA g⁻¹, the cathode maintained a capacity of 170 mAh g⁻¹ after 200 cycles, with a low decay rate of 0.16% per cycle. Furthermore, a preconditioning strategy in which the electrode was first cycled at 0.5 V for 20 cycles to form the SEI layer, followed by cycling within the normal 1.5–3.0 V range at 500 mA g⁻¹, resulted in even better performance, retaining 187 mAh g⁻¹ at the 200th cycle. In contrast, a cell cycled only within 1.5–3.0 V retained merely 87 mAh g⁻¹ after 200 cycles. These results demonstrate that controlled SEI formation effectively reinforces morphological stability, mitigates structural degradation, and substantially improves long-term cycling performance once dissolution has been suppressed. In Chapter 5, we build upon Chapter 4 and introduce a more controlled strategy for cathode surface stabilization through the incorporation of fluoroethylene carbonate (FEC) as a CEI-forming additive. The addition of 1 wt.% FEC promotes the formation of a robust CEI layer that significantly suppresses particle pulverization and enhances structural integrity during cycling. SEM and TEM analyses reveal that the optimized CEI layer is relatively uniform and approximately 30 nm thick, effectively mitigating active material degradation. As a result, the Li₂DHBQ cathode with 1% FEC exhibits substantially improved electrochemical performance. When cycled at 500 mA g⁻¹, the electrode retains 185 mAh g⁻¹ after 200 cycles with a low-capacity decay rate of 0.049% per cycle, compared to 81 mAh g⁻¹ and a decay rate of 0.302% per cycle for the FEC-free battery. In addition to enhanced cycling stability, the FEC-containing cell demonstrates superior rate capability, supported by a dominant capacitive contribution of up to 93.7%, indicating accelerated surface-controlled charge storage behavior. These findings confirm that CEI engineering via controlled additive incorporation effectively stabilizes the electrode structure, suppresses interfacial degradation, and optimizes charge storage kinetics once dissolution has been mitigated. The results highlight the importance of interphase design in enabling stable and high-rate organic cathode systems. Beyond electrochemical stability, in Chapter 6 this work also addresses sustainability and end-of-life considerations. A proof-of-concept recycling strategy for Li₂DHBQ-based cathodes was developed using solubility-selective disassembly. By exploiting the solubility contrast among active material, conductive additive, binder, and current collector, approximately 95% of Li₂DHBQ could be recovered under mild conditions. This result highlights the intrinsic compatibility of organic cathode systems with low-energy and environmentally benign recycling pathways. Overall, through coordination polymer immobilization, interfacial engineering, and recyclability-oriented electrode design, this work provides coherent design principles for developing stable, insoluble, and recyclable carbonyl-based cathodes toward sustainable lithium-ion battery technologies.
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    Evaluating the form and mobility of phosphorus in urban streambed sediment
    (University of Waterloo, 2026-05-14) Gijzen, Jonathan
    Phosphorus (P) enrichment remains a primary driver of eutrophication in freshwater systems, yet the processes governing its storage, transformation, and mobility in urban watersheds are not well documented. Sediment is the dominant vector for P transport in aquatic systems, and its fate is governed by interacting physical and biogeochemical processes. Once deposited, streambed sediments act as both sinks and sources of P, regulating downstream P transport during environmentally sensitive summer baseflow conditions through sediment-water dissolved P exchange. This study investigates the distribution, speciation, and mobility of sediment-associated P in a small (76 km²), predominantly urban watershed (Laurel Creek, Ontario, Canada), with an emphasis on fine-grained streambed sediments and longitudinal variability along the river continuum. Sequential extraction was used to quantify PP fractions (NAIP, AP, OP), while the major element composition of streambed sediment (Fe, Al, Mn, Mg, Ca, Na) was measured to assess geochemical controls on PP partitioning. Phosphorus mobility was evaluated using the equilibrium phosphate concentration (EPC0) and phosphate exchange potential (PEP) to determine the potential of stream sediments to function as sources or sinks of soluble reactive P (SRP). Results demonstrate that both PP form and mobility are strongly influenced by land use and impoundments. Total particulate phosphorus (TPP) ranged from 424 to 1220 µg g⁻¹, indicating substantial P storage within streambed sediments. Bioavailable PP (NAIP) was significantly enriched in agricultural headwaters (U = 0, p < 0.01) and was strongly correlated with Fe, Al, Mn, and organic matter. Downstream trends in sediment geochemistry, characterized by decreasing Fe, Al, and Mn and increasing Ca and Mg, were associated with reduced bioavailable P fractions. Similarly, higher EPC0 values and positive PEP were observed at agricultural sites, indicating a greater potential for SRP release during baseflow. In contrast, urban sites displayed lower and more variable EPC0 and PEP values, showing both potential source and sink behavior. Impoundments appear to play a key role in attenuating P transport in Laurel Creek, with reduced PP concentrations and lower EPC0 observed downstream, suggesting retention of P-rich sediments within upstream reaches. Overall, sediment P dynamics in Laurel Creek watershed are controlled by interactions among land use, geochemistry, and urban impoundments. Fine sediments function as both legacy P reservoirs and regulators of SRP, varying along the river continuum. These findings highlight the importance of integrating P speciation and mobility assessments to improve understanding of in-stream P cycling and to inform management strategies aimed at reducing downstream eutrophication in urbanizing watersheds.
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    Beyond the Lab: Integrated Biosensing Platforms for Point-of-Care Diagnostics and Continuous Monitoring in Blood, Skin, and Brain
    (University of Waterloo, 2026-05-13) Keyvani, Fatemeh
    Conventional disease diagnosis and health monitoring rely on centralized laboratory testing that requires invasive biofluid collection, complex processing, and specialized equipment. These methods are costly, time-consuming, and provide only intermittent data, limiting their utility for timely decision-making. This thesis addresses these challenges by developing advanced biosensing platforms that combine minimally invasive sampling with different detection modalities to enable point-of-care (POC) diagnostics and continuous monitoring. The overarching vision is to enable on-site biomarker quantification and continuous monitoring of disease-relevant indicators. The first platform focuses on POC screening for cervical cancer (CC), a disease that disproportionately affects women in low- and middle-income countries due to limited access to screening. We developed an Integrated Microfluidic Electrochemical Assay for Cervical Cancer (IMEAC), a low-cost and user-friendly system that combines a force-free plasma separation module with a graphene oxide-based electrochemical biosensor. The plasma separator isolates high-purity plasma directly from whole blood, while the biosensor employs sequence-specific probes to detect circulating tumor nucleic acid. The second platform expands the concept of decentralized diagnostics toward general clinical biomarker monitoring. We designed a hydrogel microneedle (HMN)–based assay capable of sampling interstitial fluid (ISF) in a minimally invasive manner. The extracted ISF is analyzed using a graphene oxide–nucleic acid (GO.NA) fluorescence biosensor, enabling real-time detection of clinically relevant biomarkers. This system was complemented with a portable fluorescence detector, yielding a complete and user-friendly POC solution. Building upon these foundations, the third platform centers on therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM), a clinical necessity for optimizing treatment efficacy. We developed a hybrid microneedle–flexible electrode biosensor (HMN-Flex) capable of real-time monitoring of two widely used antibiotics: vancomycin and gentamicin. The HMN array extracts dermal ISF and delivers it to an electrode, where target antibiotic concentrations are quantified electrochemically. The HMN-Flex system was validated in-vivo using rat models, with pharmacokinetic profiles showing strong concordance with conventional blood-based assays. The fourth platform translates the principles of minimally invasive, continuous biosensing into the neurocritical care environment. Patients with external ventricular drains (EVDs) require close monitoring of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) to detect complications such as infection and drain malfunction. We developed NeuroSense, a multiplexed sensing platform that integrates seamlessly with standard EVD systems to provide continuous, real-time monitoring of CSF. NeuroSense provides measurements of CSF glucose, lactate, pH, and flow rate, thus reporting about potential infection and EVD malfunction. Taken together, the works presented in this thesis demonstrate how integrating novel sampling strategies, nanomaterial-enabled biosensors, and system-level design with interdisciplinary advances in microfluidics, microneedles, and electrochemical and optical sensing can overcome intrinsic limitations of laboratory-based diagnostics. These platforms establish a technological foundation for next-generation healthcare systems that prioritize accessibility, timeliness, and personalization, with the potential to improve patient outcomes in high-resource clinical settings and expand access to quality care in underserved regions worldwide.
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    Radiometric properties of galvannealed steel
    (University of Waterloo, 2026-05-13) Kagaya, Michiyo
    Galvannealed steel has a wide application in automobile industry due to its superior corrosion resistance, weldability, and paint adhesion. The intermetallic phases in galvanneal coatings are connected to these desired properties and strongly influenced by the heating schedule during the manufacturing process. However, the coating transformation during the galvannealing process affects radiometric properties of galvanneal coating and complicates inline pyrometry. Inaccurate temperature readings and lack of inline surface state monitoring methods lead to deficient properties and increase scrap rates during production. A good understanding of the radiometric properties of galvannealed steel helps improve inline pyrometry and potentially enables inferences of coating surface state based on radiometric measurements, but currently there is a lack of in-depth studies on radiometric properties of galvannealed steel in literature. This thesis fills the knowledge gap by first correlating the radiometric properties of industrially galvannealed steels with their surface morphology and phase composition through ex-situ analysis. The ex-situ data gives insight into pyrometry improvement and inline surface state monitoring with galvannealed steel, which are further verified with in-situ study. Results from in-situ radiometric experiments on lab-simulated galvannealing process at different wavelength ranges further confirm previous findings from the ex-situ analysis. The radiometric properties of galvannealed steel rapidly change during production due to the coating transformation. The 1.5–2.5 μm wavelength range, part of the near-infrared (NIR) region, is ideal for pyrometry due to the consistent radiometric behavior between different surface state of galvanneal coatings. The optimal wavelength range of inline surface state monitoring is the mid-infrared (MIR), or 2.5–15 μm, due to the strong correlation between galvanneal surface state and radiometric properties observed in this range.
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    Applying Fisher Knowledge and Scientific Data to Understand Species Importance in Chilika Lagoon, India
    (University of Waterloo, 2026-05-13) Serrao, Natasha
    Direct monitoring of fish biodiversity can be challenging because of financial and logistical constraints. Conservation biologists have designated “surrogates”, which are a small number of species that represent the health of other species and/or overall environmental conditions. One type of surrogate, a keystone species, is a species whose impact is disproportionate relative to its abundance; the absence of which would change the dynamics of an ecological or a human community. This thesis advances a novel approach for identifying important fish species in Chilika Lagoon, India, by engaging with keystone literature as a starting point. To achieve this, four specific objectives guide this research: to 1) examine the strengths, drawbacks, and gaps associated with both ecological and cultural approaches to measuring keystone species status, 2) compare vernacular naming conventions for locally important fish across three ecologically and geographically disparate villages within Chilika Lagoon, India, 3) to identify the most important fish within each of the three Chilika Lagoon villages, and 4) to further investigate the social and ecological dimensions that guide fish importance. To achieve these objectives, I applied a mixed-methods approach, with an emphasis on community-based approaches. First, a systematic scoping review was applied to examine the literature on keystone within the fish and fisheries context between 2014 and 2023. Key findings from this chapter highlight that many studies use the term “keystone” without formally testing to see if it is a keystone. Second, this review underscores the importance of ecosystem dynamic modelling through the program Ecopath with EcoSim in designating keystone species within an ecological context. Lastly, findings from this review point to an over-emphasis on ecological dimensions and an under-emphasis on cultural-social dimensions of the keystone concept. A recommendation from this chapter was to incorporate local knowledge of fisher folk when designating keystone species status. To better contextualize fisher knowledge with respect to individual species, there is a need to link vernacular and scientific fish naming, so that results can be interpreted between formal as well as traditional/customary resource management systems. To achieve this, photos of 56 locally important fishes were shown to fishers (n = 108) across three villages by applying an age-gender-village approach wherein equal fishers were selected within each of age and gender groupings for each village. Key findings from this chapter highlighted that most species had multiple vernacular names, with many of these names being the result of phonetic differences. Secondly, no notable age or gender differences was apparent in the study sites in how people name fish. Lastly, village differences were apparent in how fish are named across all three communities. This research created a path forward for grouping locally important fish species by their vernacular names. Subsequently, a community-based approach was undertaken to designate important species in Chilika Lagoon, and to identify the rationale guiding perceptions of their importance. To achieve this, household surveys (n = 90) were administered across the three villages by applying a gender-village approach. Key findings highlight that while many important species were village-specific, commercially lucrative fish were identified as consistent across all villages. Additionally, women tended to select cultural reasons for fish importance, while men tended to select ecological and economic reasons. The results presented in these three chapters illustrate the importance of taking a multi-dimensional approach that considers both keystone theory and community-based perspectives for designating and conserving important fish species. Chapter two provides us with a comprehensive understanding of the term keystone as it relates to fisheries holds significance because over 700 papers were examined to understand the trends, gaps, and strengths associated with the keystone concept. The value fisher knowledge can bring to designate keystone species was emphasized, and fisher perspectives were placed at the forefront of Chapters 3 and 4. This dissertation also helps to create stronger linkages between scientific and vernacular names (Chapter 3). Properly documenting the linkages between vernacular and scientific naming of local fish is necessary before fisher knowledge can be interpreted and applied. The linkages also allow us to accurately reference animal and plant species despite the many names applied across different languages. This initiative was significant because it captured the link between scientific and local names of Chilika fish and served as the building block to provide important insights for data interpretation and analysis of Chapter 4. Third, this research resulted in a novel method for determining species significance within a community because I consider both village and gender, as well as the underlying rationale for fish importance put forward by fishers, instead of using the keystone indicators from academic literature that were mentioned in Chapter 2. Fourth, this dissertation considers the intracultural diversity within the fisher community, and the importance of gender and village in helping to shape perspectives. These findings are important for both research and policy because it emphasizes the heterogeneity of fisher perspectives, and that findings from one group cannot be extrapolated to another.
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    Design, Dynamics, and Control of Upper-Limb Exoskeleton Robots
    (University of Waterloo, 2026-05-13) Wang, Yuntian
    Modern technology has enabled great improvements in the design and control of exoskeletons, which can assist users in various applications, including rehabilitation, muscle fatigue reduction, and power augmentation. However, existing power augmentation exoskeletons still face challenges in user comfort and transparency to the user. To improve the power augmentation, an active-passive shoulder exoskeleton was designed in a previous study, which combines the benefits of active and passive actuators, and was controlled by an electromyography-based (EMG) method. However, EMG-based control is sensitive to probe placement and unsuitable for factory use, while force/torque sensors add cost and depend on reliable contact. Therefore, we pursue model-based controllers of this active passive platform, without EMG or force/torque sensors. We first built a high-fidelity skeletal shoulder model in MapleSim, to guide our exoskeleton mechanical and controller designs. It was combined with the exoskeleton model to evaluate the proposed methods. To reduce unnecessary fatigue induced by human exoskeleton misalignment, it is important to understand the moving joint center of the human shoulder complex. The scapular kinematics is especially complex, so we proposed a simplified scapulothoracic model and validated it using bone-pin measurement data. To reduce human effort, a low impedance is required, but the long support chains in shoulder exoskeletons inherently make it prone to vibration. Hence, we proposed a model based vibration attenuation (VA) method for the exoskeleton in question. Static and dynamic human efforts were separately compensated, and the vibration attenuator was derived from identified structural elasticity. Furthermore, variable impedance can improve user comfort, but existing variable impedance profiles require expert tuning; thus, a new variable impedance law (Var-V) was proposed based on human biomechanics, which requires minimal tuning. To evaluate the proposed VA method and variable impedance law, we developed: i) a high-fidelity human-exoskeleton model in MapleSim; ii) a new 1-degree-of-freedom (DOF) human-exoskeleton adaptation model in MATLAB (CNS-MTG); iii) human-in-the-loop (HITL) experiments based on surface electromyography (sEMG). The MapleSim model assumes a perfect human adaptation that is not gradual, but it is more realistic than the 1-DOF adaptation model. The CNS-MTG adaptation model combined the human motor learning with muscle torque generator models, so that it has the advantages of both models. Two sets of HITL experiments were conducted: one for the VA method with a single participant, and the other for both the VA method and variable impedance laws with ten participants.
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    Adaptive Differential Privacy Budgeting Strategy for Optimizing Synthetic Data Generation and Privacy–Utility Trade-offs
    (University of Waterloo, 2026-05-13) Padalko, Kateryna
    Training generative models under differential privacy (DP) requires injecting calibrated noise into gradient updates, creating an inherent trade-off between privacy protection and data quality. In standard DP-CTGAN, a single discriminator processes all features under a shared privacy budget, so noise injected to protect sensitive demographic attributes equally degrades the learning signal for non-sensitive features, an architectural limitation, not a mathematical one. We propose the Dual-Path DP-CTGAN, a discriminator architecture that partitions features into sensitive and non-sensitive paths, each governed by its own DP-SGD mechanism and Rényi DP accountant. Gradient isolation confines privacy noise to its respective path, preserving the learning signal for non-sensitive features without relaxing the formal (ε, δ)-DP guarantee. By the post-processing theorem, the generator inherits the privacy guarantees of both paths without additional composition. We embed this architecture in a Bayesian multi-objective hyperparameter optimisation pipeline that jointly evaluates utility, distributional fidelity, and empirical privacy risk, using Pareto-dominance selection to surface non-dominated configurations. Experiments on the Adult Census Income benchmark demonstrate that Dual-Path at ε = 1 achieves distributional fidelity below the non-private baseline and reduces the downstream utility gap by 79% relative to single-path DP-CTGAN at the same budget, exceeding single-path performance at ε = 5 while maintaining comparable empirical privacy risk. Per-feature analysis confirms that the fidelity gain concentrates in the feature group freed from cross-path noise contamination, providing direct evidence for the gradient isolation mechanism. These results suggest that discriminator architecture, rather than the noise mechanism itself, is the primary bottleneck limiting utility in standard DP-GAN designs.
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    Mitigating Risks to Dependability from Vibe-Coding C for Embedded Systems
    (University of Waterloo, 2026-05-13) Dunne, Murray
    Vibe coding is the process of using a Large Language Model (LLM) to iteratively generate software code. It is popular, with 36% of workers at technology companies reporting adoption of generative artificial intelligence for software engineering in 2024 [1]. At this rate of use, LLM-generated code is quickly becoming part of the embedded-systems that comprise our everyday cyber-physical infrastructure. Most of this infrastructure is built on C language code [2]. LLM-generated C code poses threats to dependability, exhibiting faults such as buffer overflows, out-of-bounds writes, integer overflows, and more. In this work, we contribute methods for improving the dependability of these systems in three key parts: providing a real-world benchmark dataset for evaluating LLM-generated C code, protecting LLM code generation from poisoning attacks, and detecting changes in production embedded systems through power side-channel analysis. This work begins with an examination and categorization of weaknesses in LLMgenerated C code for embedded systems networking. Our findings suggest that LLMs perform poorly at programming tasks involving direct interactions with memory. Scores on existing LLM-generated C benchmarks do not adequately express this difficulty, as these benchmarks do not include sufficiently real-world C programming challenges. To support future testing of LLMs, we introduce EmbedEvalC, a dataset of C coding challenges to provide a benchmark against which LLMs can be evaluated on real-world tasks. Retrieval Augmented Code Generation (RACG) is an essential tool for vibe coding, but presents new threats to dependability from poisoning attacks. If an attacker can cause a RACG system to retrieve their crafted documents, they can induce the LLM to generate code with weaknesses. To detect this attack, we introduce canary functions, a process by which specific functions in the codebase are regenerated and re-tested to determine whether the addition of new documents induces new weaknesses. Finally, we consider the black-box setting where a systems integrator seeks to detect unexpected changes in embedded firmware. Such changes will only become more common with the proliferation of vibe coding. We suggest using power side-channel analysis to provide a feedback mechanism to a fuzzer in order to determine if a fuzzing input has caused a new response from the system. We show that responses involving five or more memory-interacting instructions are consistently detectable. In this work, we suggest a collection of techniques to mitigate risks to the dependability of embedded systems posed by LLM-generated C code. Abstract Citations: [1] Alex Singla, Alexander Sukharevsky, Lareina Yee, Michael Chui, and Bryce Hall. "The state of AI: How organizations are rewiring to capture value", McKinsey & Company, March 2025. [2] P. Soulier, D. Li, and J. R. Williams, “A Survey of Language-Based Approaches to Cyber-Physical and Embedded System Development,” Tsinghua Science and Technology, vol. 20, no. 2, pp. 130–141, 2015.
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    Efficiently Training Deep Learning Models on Elastic and Heterogeneous Cloud Resources
    (University of Waterloo, 2026-05-12) Guo, Runsheng
    Deep Neural Networks (DNNs) have demonstrated remarkable success across diverse domains, but their training requires substantial computational resources and is typically parallelized across large GPU clusters. However, such clusters are prohibitively expensive for most organizations to own and manage. Hence, instead of owning and managing their own clusters, organizations often rent clusters on cloud platforms to meet their training needs. While cloud environments offer elastic scalability and heterogeneous hardware options, they also introduce significant challenges for efficient distributed DNN training. Specifically, existing training frameworks lack support for dynamic reconfiguration during training, limiting the exploitation of cloud elasticity. Additionally, most systems assume homogeneous clusters, which rarely reflect the heterogeneous GPU clusters that organizations commonly use due to hardware availability constraints. Furthermore, heterogeneous network conditions in cloud environments create communication bottlenecks that limit the scalability of existing approaches. This thesis presents three systems that collectively address these limitations to enable efficient distributed DNN training on elastic and heterogeneous cloud resources. First, Hydrozoa leverages cloud elasticity through serverless containers, enabling dynamic scaling and configuration changes during training without the traditional pitfalls of serverless computing. By combining data and model parallelism with fine-grained resource provisioning, Hydrozoa achieves cost-effective training while eliminating cluster management overhead. Second, Cephalo addresses heterogeneous GPU clusters by independently balancing compute and memory resources across GPUs with different capabilities. Unlike existing approaches that tie workload assignment to computational speed, Cephalo separately optimizes compute distribution through proportional batch sizing and memory utilization through intelligent partitioning of training state, activation checkpointing, and gradient accumulation strategies. Third, Zorse tackles heterogeneous network conditions, which are particularly common in heterogeneous clusters, by efficiently combining memory-efficient data parallelism with pipeline parallelism. Through interleaved pipelining, parameter and activation offloading, and heterogeneous pipeline parallelism configurations, Zorse achieves both communication and memory efficiency for training large DNN models across diverse network topologies. The experimental evaluation demonstrates that these systems significantly improve training efficiency and resource utilization compared to existing approaches. Hydrozoa reduces training costs while providing seamless scalability, Cephalo simultaneously achieves high compute and memory utilization in heterogeneous clusters, and Zorse maintains high throughput under varying network conditions. Together, these contributions make distributed DNN training more accessible, cost-effective, and efficient in modern cloud environments, advancing the state of the art in large-scale machine learning infrastructure.
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    Evaluating Mercury Deposition over Space and Time in Critical Nesting Habitat for Endangered Whooping Crane (Wood Buffalo National Park)
    (University of Waterloo, 2026-05-12) Lacey, Amy Lynn
    The only remaining wild, self-sustaining population of endangered Whooping Crane (the Aransas-Wood Buffalo population of Grus americana) nests and breeds in a remote boreal landscape of northwestern Canada known as the Whooping Crane Summer Range (WCSR), a Ramsar Wetland of International Importance. Although geographically isolated from industrial development, ponds in the WCSR may receive deposition of substances of concern, including mercury (Hg), from far-field sources via direct atmospheric transport and deposition and locally via remobilization of legacy Hg stored in soils and catchments. Mercury is of particular concern because it is a potent neurotoxin capable of long-range transport and accumulation in aquatic ecosystems. However, there are no data available to evaluate present-day Hg concentrations in aquatic sediment, the enrichment of Hg relative to naturally occurring baseline concentrations, or long-term accumulation of Hg within WCSR pond sediment. This study investigates total mercury (THg) concentrations over space and time in pond sediments of the WCSR to determine whether the concentrations pose risk of adverse biological effects on whooping crane and other aquatic biota and to quantify the enrichment and storage of THg in pond sediment. Total Hg concentrations were measured in surface sediments collected in 2024 from 63 ponds and in radiometrically dated sediment cores spanning the past ~370 years from three ponds within the Sass–Klewi Nesting Area (SKNA), a subregion of the WCSR. Sediment cores were used to establish a multi-site pre-industrial baseline to quantify enrichment using organic matter–normalized Enrichment Factors (EFs), and to calculate cumulative inventories of excess THg for comparison with other Canadian lakes at near- and far-field distances from major sources of emissions. Concentrations of THg ranged from 2.7 – 45.4 ng g⁻¹ (mean 20.0 ± 9.9 ng g⁻¹, n = 63) in the surface sediments and from 5.4 – 72.0 ng g⁻¹ in the sediment cores. All concentrations are well below the Canadian Interim Sediment Quality Guideline of 170 ng g⁻¹ and indicate that adverse biological effects on aquatic life are unlikely to occur at present and in the past. Strong, positive linear relations between THg concentrations and organic matter (OM) content in sediment deposited before ~1900 at three ponds allowed for construction of a multi-site pre-industrial OM-normalized baseline capable of estimating the amount of enrichment in samples deposited since 1900 in sediment cores each of the three pond and the surface sediment samples from 63 ponds. Peak THg enrichment occurred between ~1960 and ~2010 at the three ponds, when EFs range from 1.5-2.6 and signify ‘minimal enrichment’ based on widely used categorization. After ~2010, EFs decline rapidly to around 1.0, indicating a return to concentrations that existed before 1900. The mean EF for the surface sediment samples collected from 63 ponds in 2024 is 1.03, indicating no enrichment relative to pre-1900 sediment, and EFs exceed the 1.5 threshold for ‘minimal enrichment’ at fewer than 10% of the ponds. The cumulative inventory of excess THg at pond SK 43 falls within a narrow range reported for other lakes in Canada at far-field distances from industrialization and is 700 times lower than a lake at near-field distance from a major point source of Hg emissions (mine and smelter at Flin Flon, Manitoba). These findings suggest that mercury poses little risk of harm to whooping crane and other aquatic organisms. The pre-1900 baselines generated during the research can be used in future sediment quality monitoring to detect whether ongoing climatic and environmental changes begin to elevate THg concentrations above natural levels.
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    Design, Testing, and Analysis of Advanced Massive MIMO Transmitters
    (University of Waterloo, 2026-05-12) Lim, Jin Gyu
    The evolution of Fifth Generation (5G) wireless systems is driven by the need for higher data rates, lower latency, and improved coverage. Massive Multiple Input, Multiple Output (MIMO) transmitter front-ends have emerged as a key enabling technology, employing multiple parallel transmitter chains—each comprising Digital Signal Processing (DSP), Power Amplifiers (PAs), and antenna elements—to exploit spatial multiplexing and enable multi-user beamforming, at the cost of increased system complexity. The PA is a critical component in each transmitter chain, as its efficiency dominates energy consumption and its output power determines coverage. However, PA performance is highly sensitive to load impedance. While isolators in 4G systems maintain a constant 50 Ω load, their use in massive MIMO arrays is impractical due to cost, size, bandwidth, and integration constraints. Consequently, antenna mismatches and mutual coupling introduce dynamic load variations that degrade PA and overall system performance, motivating a holistic system-level design approach. The first objective of this thesis is to develop tools for system-level analysis of massive MIMO transmitters under realistic excitation. A multidisciplinary co-simulation frame- work integrating DSP, Radio Frequency (RF), and electromagnetic domains is proposed to capture signal processing, PA nonlinearities, and antenna coupling within a unified environment. Experimental validation using a four-channel fully digital MIMO transmit- ter demonstrates accurate prediction of system-level trends. A sixteen-channel testbed is further developed to validate design strategies and capture hardware-specific effects. The second objective is to enable PA design under realistic system conditions. To mitigate the computational complexity of large-scale simulations, an emulation platform is developed that reproduces massive MIMO loading conditions using a single PA. This approach enables efficient characterization and optimization under dynamic impedance environments. Combined with the co-simulation framework, it supports PA design directly at the system level rather than under idealized 50 Ω assumptions. The third objective is to investigate the impact of precoding on PA behavior. Con- ventional Digital Pre-Distortion (DPD) linearizes PAs using uncorrelated signals prior to precoding, implicitly assuming invariant load conditions. However, precoding alters signal correlation and power distribution, thereby modifying the load impedance seen by each PA in the presence of mutual coupling, which degrades linearization performance. To ad- dress this, an alternative architecture is explored in which precoding precedes linearization, enabling improved robustness and reduced DPD complexity under dynamic conditions.
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    Monolithic Integration of GeTe Switches and BST Varactors for Reconfigurable Millimeter-Wave Devices
    (University of Waterloo, 2026-05-12) Golcheshmeh, Mehran
    Reconfigurable microwave and millimeter-wave systems require tunable components that provide low loss, high resolution, and compact implementation. Conventional approaches based on semiconductor devices, microelectromechanical systems (MEMS), and purely analog or digital tuning techniques face limitations in loss, tuning range, resolution, and integration complexity. Therefore, alternative approaches are needed that can overcome these challenges while remaining compatible with integrated fabrication processes. This thesis presents the development of tunable RF components based on the monolithic integration of ferroelectric barium strontium titanate (BST) varactors and phase-change material (PCM) germanium telluride (GeTe) switches. BST varactors provide continuous analog tuning with low power consumption, while GeTe switches enable discrete, nonvolatile reconfiguration. The combination of these technologies enables a hybrid analog–digital tuning approach that improves tuning range and flexibility. The work begins with the development and optimization of fabrication process for BST thin-film varactors, followed by their application in tunable circuits. A monolithic fabrication process is then developed to integrate BST varactors and GeTe switches. The challenges associated with material compatibility and process conditions are addressed, and both BST and GeTe devices are fabricated and characterized. Using this platform, hybrid analog–digital varactors with enhanced tuning range are demonstrated. Finally, the hybrid tuning approach is applied to the design and implementation of phase shifters, including true-time-delay (TTD) and reflective-type architectures. These designs combine the advantages of analog and digital tuning to achieve improved phase control, compact implementation, and reduced loss compared to conventional approaches. The results presented in this thesis demonstrate the effectiveness of combining BST varactors and GeTe switches for the realization of reconfigurable millimeter-wave components, providing a practical approach for next-generation tunable RF systems.
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    Decentralized and Agentic Spectrum Management in Cognitive Wireless Networks
    (University of Waterloo, 2026-05-11) Abognah, Anas
    Dynamic spectrum management and sharing have been the subject of extensive research and development for many years. The ever-increasing demand for wireless spectrum from an exponentially growing number of devices and applications has led to a spectrum scarcity problem that remains unsolved. In addition, the rigid and prolonged nature of the regulatory processes of manually allocating spectrum has led to large swaths of spectrum bands being underutilized and inaccessible to new applications. Dynamic spectrum sharing can alleviate these problems by enabling new applications and devices to opportunistically access unused spectrum. Multiple spectrum sharing frameworks have been proposed by regulatory bodies where access to the shared spectrum is controlled and managed by a centralized third-party controller. However, these centralized spectrum sharing frameworks fail to provide truly dynamic and scalable spectrum sharing as they lack mechanisms for spectrum trading and do not provide incentives for primary users to participate in such models. In addition, existing decentralized spectrum management approaches rely on numerical optimization models that lack autonomous decision making capabilities, and are semantically blind and unable to interpret the unstructured regulatory policies and requirements. The need for a fully dynamic, and autonomous, spectrum sharing framework that satisfies the regulatory requirements and provides built-in economic incentives still exists. In this thesis, we propose and implement a fully decentralized spectrum management and sharing framework that resolves the issues inherent in the centralized model and closes the semantic gap through autonomous cognitive agents. We implement a comprehensive decentralized model that converges blockchain technology, federated learning, and Large Language Model (LLM) agents to automate and optimize dynamic spectrum sharing, sensing, and access in a single framework. The implemented model eliminates the reliance on centralized brokers through a two-tier Hyperledger Fabric blockchain network that guarantees trust, transparency, and immutable audit trails for spectrum sharing while eliminating single points of failure. In addition, the model facilitates cooperative decentralized spectrum sensing via federated model training on the blockchain achieving 92% detection accuracy. Finally, we implement BLAST (Blockchain LLM Agentic Spectrum Trading), which eliminates static decision-making and requirements analysis through autonomous cognitive agents. We demonstrate that LLM-driven agents employing game-theoretic reasoning within second-price sealed-bid auctions maximize social welfare and spectrum allocation efficiency and significantly outperform traditional heuristic strategies and state-of-the-art non-LLM decentralized models. This research establishes a concrete architectural blueprint for 6G and beyond, where decentralized intelligence, economic incentives, and regulatory compliance coexist within a unified, autonomous execution framework.
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    Putting Humpty-Dumpty back together: characterizing coherent recombination in Stern-Gerlach interferometers
    (University of Waterloo, 2026-05-11) Meng, Danny
    I show that superficially similar implementations of Stern-Gerlach Interferometers (SGIs) are expected to differ dramatically in their sensitivity to fields transverse to the primary acceleration direction. These transverse fields unavoidably accompany any static magnetic or electric field gradients, and have been shown by Comparat [Phys. Rev. A101, 023606 (2020)] to limit the precision application of SGIs. As a concrete example, I consider SGIs with ultracold Rb Rydberg atoms accelerated by spatially-varying electric fields and find that the deleterious effect of transverse fields imply that only some implementations (sequences of field gradients, internal state swaps and so-on) may exhibit fringes with high visibility. I further show that these differences are not strongly dependent on the form of the initial state. I provide a derivation of the Humpty-Dumpty equation for a general initial state and show that it holds for any interferometry sequence where the force as a function of time is piecewise constant. A modified version of the equation is shown to hold for any general sequence with a linear potential. I then extend this analysis to the transverse components of the described SGI, and give a form for the time evolution operator that is analogous to the one used in deriving the Humpty-Dumpty equation.
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    Controlling Metabolic Flux in Vacuum-Assisted Fermentation: The Interplay of pH and Operating Mode in the Valorization of Glucose to Volatile Fatty Acids and Biofuels
    (University of Waterloo, 2026-05-11) Hooshmand, Masoomeh
    Over the last two decades, anaerobic digestion has been increasingly implemented for organic waste treatment and production of biogas and electric energy which can be exploited beyond the plant boundaries. However, this process has limitations including high capital costs, low revenues from energy recovery, and the generation of nutrient-rich streams which require further treatment. Hence, anaerobic digestion was modified to go beyond energy recovery through the production and recovery of higher-value products via anaerobic fermentation. A newly proposed process called IntensiCarb™ (IC) applies vacuum-assisted fermentation to enable process intensification, enhance the resource recovery and implement circular economy policies. However, a critical knowledge gap exists regarding the influence of key operational parameters on its performance outcomes. This research addressed this uncertainty by systematically investigating the effects of pH (5.5, 7.0, and 9.0) and vacuum operating mode (sequential evaporation and intermittent evaporation) on the fermentation of glucose in lab-scale, semi-continuous reactors. The results demonstrated that pH regulated metabolic flux, inducing a shift from hydrogen- and butyrate-producing pathways to ethanol- and acetate-dominant fermentation as pH increased from 5.5 to 9.0. The vacuum-enhanced modes intensified the process, operating at double the organic loading rate of the conventional system. However, performance—evaluated based on COD-normalized product yields—was highly dependent on the interaction between pH and operating mode. At neutral and alkaline pH, a clear performance hierarchy was established against the baseline reference points: the intermittent evaporation-fermentation (IEF) mode yielded more total volatile fatty acids (TVFA) and hydrogen than both the sequential evaporation-fermentation (SEF) mode and conventional fermentation (CF). For instance, at pH 9.0, the IEF mode achieved a maximum TVFA yield of 63.0 ± 1.1%, outperforming both the SEF (60.1 ± 1.7%) and CF (56.7 ± 1.2%) baselines. This superior performance was attributed to the IEF mode’s ability to alleviate thermodynamic limitations (e.g., inhibitory hydrogen partial pressure) through more frequent, in-situ product removal compared to the end-of-cycle removal in SEF. Critically, this trend reversed under acidic conditions (pH 5.5), where CF produced a higher TVFA yield (64.6 ± 2.3%) than either IEF (53.2 ± 1.0%) or SEF (51.7 ± 1.0%). This antagonistic interaction was attributed to heightened product inhibition from the accumulation of undissociated VFAs under the intensified IC conditions. These findings reveal that while the IC process is a powerful platform for targeted chemical production, its performance is dictated by the interplay between pH and process intensification, which must be carefully managed to avoid inhibitory effects and maximize resource valorization.
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    Using GIS Spatial Analysis to Investigate Burial Complexities and Variation at Wadi Faynan 100, Jordan
    (University of Waterloo, 2026-05-11) Schwarz, Maegen-Rose
    This research investigates the spatial and stylistic relationships between EBA Ib burials that were excavated during the 2019 and 2023 field season of the Barqa Landscape Project (BLP), located in Wadi Faynan, Jordan. Spatial analyses included Near analysis, Hot spot analysis, and Inverse weight distributed (IDW) analyses which were conducted through the use of ArcPro. Results showed an increased level of grave good variety present in the burials located on the southern hills of WF100. Emerging grave pairs (Graves 1 & 2, 4 & 5, 6 & 7, 8 & 9, and 10 & 11) were found to hold reciprocated proximity ranking. There was no apparent sign of hot or cold spot presence. Comparing the structures to one another and to external EBA Ib burial grounds, stylistic similarities between graves include external stone wall lining, flat floor stones, built in alcoves in the Northern end, and grave openings to the North while the burials run North - South. Similarities between Wadi Faynan 100 and other EBA Ib sites in the Southern Levant include grave orientation, flat floor stones and artifacts. Results conclude that the Wadi Faynan 100 burial ground displays a level of connection between graves, while also affording room for stylistic difference. While sharing stylistic components of other EBA Ib burial grounds found within the southern Levant, WF100 maintains its own individuality in terms of construction and patterns.