Contact
Fraunhofer WKI
Department of Material Analysis and Indoor Chemistry
Bienroder Weg 54 E
38108 Braunschweig, Germany
Phone: +49-531-2155-213
Fax: +49-531-2155-200
tunga.salthammer(at)wki.fraunhofer.de
Researcher ID: F-6638-2013
ORCID: 0000-0002-2370-8664
Fraunhofer Wilhelm-Klauditz Institut (WKI)
Tunga Salthammer earned a Doctor of Natural Science degree (Dr. rer. nat.) in Physical Chemistry from the Technical University of Braunschweig, Germany. He joined the Fraunhofer WKI in 1990 and was appointed as head of the Department of Material Analysis and Indoor Chemistry in 1996. From January 2010 until October 2010, he was the acting director of WKI, and since March 2011, he is the deputy director of the institute. Salthammer served on the ISIAQ Board of Directors from 2003–2006. From 2003–2009, he was a Professor of Indoor Hygiene at the University of Applied Sciences Braunschweig/Wolfenbuettel. Since 2007, Salthammer has been an Adjunct Professor at the Queensland University of Technology in Brisbane, Australia. In June 2008, he received his habilitation from the Faculty of Life Sciences at the Technical University of Braunschweig and was appointed as an apl. (Adjunct) Professor in December 2012. Salthammer has been a Visiting Professor at the Technical University of Denmark in Lyngby, Tsinghua University in Beijing and Central South University of Forestry and Technology, Changsha. He is the chairman of the Indoor Air Hygiene Commission of the German Federal Environment Agency and past president of the ISIAQ Academy of Fellows. His research interests include analytical chemistry, VOC/SVOC emission studies on indoor materials using test chambers and cells, indoor chemistry, airborne particles, and settled dust.
• Distribution of semi volatile organic compounds in the indoor environment
• Air pollutants in the museum environment
• Analysis of formaldehyde, volatile organic compounds and NO in human breath
• Release of formaldehyde and volatile organic compounds from building materials
• Sensory evaluation of building materials
• Specific identification of engineered nanoparticles in the atmosphere
• Removal of organic pollutants by TiO2 photocatalysis
• Application of zeolites for the removal of air pollutants
• The Phenomenon of “Black Magic Dust” in Housings
• Release of ultrafine particles from electronic devices and household appliances
• Modelling of particle deposition in the human respiratory system
• Very volatile organic compounds (VVOCs) in the indoor environment
• Human exposure to vapour from electronic cigarettes
Morawska L. and Salthammer T. (eds.) (2003): Indoor Environment: Airborne Particles and Settled Dust. WILEY-VCH, Weinheim.
Salthammer T. and Uhde E. (eds.) (2009): Organic Indoor Air Pollutants, 2nd Edition. WILEY-VCH, Weinheim.
Schieweck A. and Salthammer T. (2013) Schadstoffe in Museen Bibliotheken und Archiven, 2. Auflage. IRB-Verlag, Stuttgart.