10 computer-aided-design Postdoctoral positions at University of Liverpool in United Kingdom
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between Departments is important to the role which will be based in the Materials Innovation Factory. The post will involve leading an iterative programme of applied polymer chemistry and materials science
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Chen, based in the Department of Chemistry and the Materials Innovation Factory. Key responsibilities and duties: ¿ Design, synthesise and characterise new smart sustainable polymers and/or polymer
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in Python, working with high-performance computing clusters, and implementing reproducible research workflows. The position requires expertise in prokaryotic genomics, strong statistical and
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This is an exciting opportunity to join a cutting-edge, multidisciplinary project at the intersection of microbiology, animal health, and agricultural robotics. In a collaboration between the University of Liverpool and AG Products Ltd., you will play a key role in evaluating the impact of a...
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. ¿ Study design, protocol development and laboratory diet planning. ¿ Leading on participant recruitment, data collection and analysis. ¿ Supervising a graduate level research assistant
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services (ECO-WADE).¿ You will plan, organise and lead fieldwork on an upland blanket bog in North Wales, and make measurements of greenhouse gas fluxes, water table depths, and water chemistry. This is part
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computer codes to solve some of the daily research problems and have experience with high performance computing. You should have a PhD in Chemistry, Physics or Materials Science with a proven research track
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(and clinicians) at St. Paul¿s Eye Hospital and help establish a patient focus group to co-develop this technology as an effective early intervention. Applicants should have, or be about to obtain, a
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to artificial intelligence (AI) (e.g. computer science, engineering, Statistics, and mathematics etc.) The post is available for 30 months, starting on 1 September 2025. If you are still awaiting your PhD to be
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-2025). Scaling explains how the machinery that controls pattern formation in development adapts, so that organs of different sizes show proportioned structures: the same developmental machinery can build