74 channel-coding-electrical-engineering Postdoctoral research jobs at Technical University of Denmark in Denmark
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
friendly environment at one of the top leading engineering research institutions in Europe. About the Novo Nordisk Foundation Centre for Biosustainability Biosustainability is the discovery, production and
-
Biomedicine (DTU Bioengineering) in the research group “Biomass Conversion and Bioprocess Technology” (BCBT group). With this position, we want to expand our research in biomass conversion and sustainable
-
Technology (DTU Space), current focus areas cover large-scale structure of the universe, physics of compact objects, exoplanets, upper atmosphere physics and cosmo-climatology as well as development
-
, religion or ethnic background are encouraged to apply. As DTU works with research in critical technology, which is subject to special rules for security and export control, open-source background checks may
-
Professor Ziwei Ouyang at DTU, ziou@dtu.dk , and Assistant Professor Hongbo Zhao at AAU, hzh@energy.aau.dk . You can read more about the Department of Electrical and Photonics Engineering (DTU Electro
-
qualification, you must hold a PhD degree (or equivalent) in computer science, computer engineering, or electrical engineering. Hardware design in a hardware description language such as Chisel, VDHL, or Verilog
-
given to: Research experience in seafood science and technology Experience with chemical and/or microbial analysis Some knowledge or experience with product development activities Supervision and teaching
-
institutional context, job roles and available resources. You will be employed at DTU Management and be associated with the section for Organisation Science and Technology. You will work physically from CAISA
-
substrates. Collaborate with electrical engineers, microfluidics experts and nanofabrication specialists to develop portable devices for diagnostics and therapeutic drug monitoring. As a formal qualification
-
. This project explores converting temperature differences in buildings into electricity using flexible TEG generators, potentially generating 10-20 W per square meter. Our project addresses challenges in