22 density-functional-theory-dft-post PhD positions at Utrecht University in Netherlands
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
measurements of key organics, plus culture experiments, to uncover the biochemical pathways and environmental controls on methane formation and oxidation. Your job This work will enhance our understanding
-
: 30 August 2025 Apply now As part of the EMBRACER project external link , you will use advanced models integrating our climate system to human behaviour to study potential scenarios of what could happen
-
data (e.g., Instagram and TikTok activity) from youth, to be able to gain unique insight into what they post and consume online. This proposed PhD project will form an integral part of a larger
-
dune datasets along the Dutch coast. Using remote sensing, you will create a national dune vegetation dataset and compare it with dune morphology data to assess the role of vegetation in decadal dune
-
to prevent it using SAI, affect food production? How would AMOC collapse impact food trade and food security? How can the global food system be made more resilient to AMOC collapse? To do so, you will work
-
cells. You will be performing cutting-edge research and will have access to state-of-the-art facilities the Utrecht Biofabrication Facility external link . You will coordinate your work within an (inter
-
. You will work on the project ‘Past, present and future global inland-water methane budget under the impact of compounded changes’. Your job Inland waters function as active biogeochemical reactors
-
, please contact Professor Appy Sluijs external link at a.sluijs@uu.nl . Please do not send your application to this email address. Note that international candidates that need a visa/work permit for
-
work on the project ‘Ocean Alkalinity Dynamics’. Your job Ocean alkalinity plays a major role in ocean’s carbon uptake, in buffering, and in calcium carbonate production and dissolution, and it impacts
-
Apply now Join the department of Earth Sciences as a PhD candidate and work on the project: Benthic microalgae and blue carbon: Investigating the role of microphytobenthos in the retention of seagrass