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interface. This PhD project aims to develop a flexible electrochemical sensing interface capable of capturing local physicochemical changes in real time. The work will explore biocompatible, deformable
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processing techniques that take full advantage of these capabilities, in order to translate them into optimal radar performance. The purpose of the PhD is to lay down theoretical and practical foundations
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identifying biomarkers associated with infection/inflammation. The PhD student will have a Personal Career Development Plan (PDCP) tailored to the student’s needs, detailing the study program, training
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and imperfections, making them both conceptually deep and technologically promising. This theoretical PhD project will investigate how topology and quantum geometry emerge and intertwine such as
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unsuitable, while the utility and performance of others remains an open question. The aim of the PhD is to derive synchronisation techniques suitable for deployment into a maritime radar sensor network
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students and is gender-balanced. In 2024, a PhD student within our group was awarded the Royal Astronomical Society’s prize for best PhD thesis in the UK. The School of Physics and Astronomy is an Institute
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This project is an exciting opportunity to undertake industrially linked research in partnership with the Manufacturing Technology Centre (MTC). It is an interdisciplinary PhD in Engineering from
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proud to be a member of the Met Office Academic Partnership (https://www.birmingham.ac.uk/research/moap/home-page ) and the studentship is closely related to the current cohort of MOAP-PhD students and
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avenues by enabling chronic, gut-based monitoring of neuroendocrine activity for applications such as closed loop therapeutics. The proposed PhD project sits at the interface of biomedical engineering
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International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) Expedition 395 (June-August 2023), has shown tipping point behaviour during the Pliocene in the deep-water return flow of the AMOC (Sinneseal et al. 2025). The aim