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This self-funded PhD research project aims to develop smart sensors based on low-frequency resonance accelerometers for condition monitoring of ultra-speed bearings. The developed smart sensors will
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industries, including: Aerospace: Faster, more efficient design and real-time condition monitoring for safer aircraft and spacecraft. Civil Engineering: Real-time health monitoring for bridges and skyscrapers
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conditions affect billions of women globally, impacting everything from cardiovascular to mental health. Despite this, women face significant delays in diagnosis and treatment, often experiencing a trial-and
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This PhD opportunity at Cranfield University invites candidates to explore the integration of AI into certification and lifecycle monitoring processes for safety-critical systems. The project delves
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of discomfort. At Swansea University we can monitor a range of perceptual, physiological and temperature parameters, alongside an array of other physiological monitoring tools to measure energy expenditure, and
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events, and the potential for peatland restoration to have significant impacts on peak flow reductions if a wider area of the moor is restored. This PhD will employ in-depth hydrological monitoring and
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; EPSRC Centre for Doctoral Training in Green Industrial Futures | Edinburgh, Scotland | United Kingdom | 3 months ago
exclusion chromatography and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy to monitor degradation in real time. The PhD research will expand on these findings by investigating the biodegradation of additional
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for long-term monitoring to confirm successful restoration5. This exciting and timely PhD will develop and deploy a range of low-cost and open-source sensors to measure the biophysical properties necessary
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. The developed new knowledge will assist performance designs, analysis, operations, and condition monitoring of sCO2 power generation systems. The project will be undertaken using the strong thermodynamic
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freshwater fish face many threats from habitat degradation and loss, to overexploitation and competition from invasive species. The absence of routine/standardised monitoring in Madagascar’s freshwaters makes