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(e.g., academia, pharmaceuticals/materials industry, data science). Additionally, you will gain research and communication skills, including a strong emphasis on integrating computational and
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AI techniques for damage analysis in advanced composite materials due to high velocity impacts - PhD
between advanced sensing and analysis, enabling fast, reliable, and quantitative damage assessment of impacted composites. This project lies at the intersection of composite materials engineering, impact
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across different imaging devices, including future sensors with unknown spectral sensitivities. Training The student will be based at the Colour & Imaging Lab at the School of Computing Sciences which has
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of Computer Science and Engineering) & Dr. Ellie Jameson (School of Natural Sciences) Requirements: Applicants should hold at least a 2:1 degree (or equivalent) in engineering, physics, chemistry, materials science
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biology: Do independent mimicry rings rely on the same genes to produce colour patterns, or are there different solutions each time mimicry evolves? Research Methodology You will work with existing high
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Title: Dynamic Processes in Organic Functional Materials Supervisors: Professor Paul R. McGonigal & Dr Alyssa-Jennifer Avestro Start date: 1st October 2026 Applications are invited for a DPhil
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Qualification: Doctor of Philosophy in Engineering (PhD) Eligibility: UK Students, EU Students, International Students Award value: Home fees and tax-free stipend - See advert for details Project
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energy? This PhD offers a rewarding chance to become a materials science expert, combining cutting-edge characterisation with real-world industrial impact. At the University of Manchester, working in
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-efficient research that prevents fatigue failures has pushed towards integrated computational materials engineering approaches that improve competitiveness. These approaches rely on physics-based models
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energy, nanotechnology and applied materials science. Applicants should hold a first-class (or equivalent) degree in a relevant engineering or science discipline (upper second class may be considered