Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Employer
- Cranfield University
- ; The University of Manchester
- ;
- ; Aston University
- ; Brunel University London
- ; Imperial College London
- ; Swansea University
- ; University of Birmingham
- ; University of Bristol
- ; University of Southampton
- ; University of Surrey
- Harper Adams University
- University of Sheffield
- 3 more »
- « less
-
Field
-
Supervisors: Dr Jun Jiang (Reader), Mechanical Engineering Department Deadline for application: 30/10/2025. Early submission is encouraged. Funding mechanisms: Fully funded by Imperial College, IDLA
-
The project: We invite applications for a fully funded PhD studentship in the Solid Mechanics Group at the University of Bristol to work on the predictive modeling of hydrogen-induced damage in
-
Establishment). Recent work by the group (leading to REF 4* rated outputs and several Keynotes) has contributed to bridging the gap between Computational Solid and Fluid Dynamics, with a unified computational
-
sits at the cutting edge of materials science and solid mechanics, using real-world microstructure data to simulate thermo-mechanical behaviour at the grain scale. Your work will form a key part of a
-
the current thermo-mechanical process use to strengthen the current generation of crush alloys. Programme will use different thermomechanical processing paths including heat treatment and more complex paths
-
mechanics and solid mechanics Willing to travel and attend the meetings with industrial partners on site; Should have or be willing to work within a multidisciplinary environment. How to apply Interested
-
numerical calculation skills and mathematical modelling skills Strong skills in solid state physics and quantum mechanics Experience in theoretical modelling and experimental investigation of optical devices
-
Application deadline: All year round Research theme: Computational Chemistry, Material Science No. of positions: 1 Eligibility: UK students This 3.5-year project is fully funded by industry and home
-
developed at Manchester to include heterogeneous magnetohydrodynamic phenomena (including current density localisation), solid-dynamics and fracture mechanics. The development of such a robust mathematical
-
computational mechanics or multiphysics modeling, with particular interest in fracture mechanics and chemo-mechanical degradation. Knowledge of solid-state defect chemistry (advantageous). You will join a dynamic