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areas of nanoscience and nanotechnology Job Title: Research Engineer - AI Development for Materials Design Research area or group: Theoretical and Computational Nanoscience Group Description of Group
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. Requirements: Minimum: PhD in Physics, Materials Science, Computational Science/Engineering, Computer Science, or related field. Demonstrated experience implementing heuristic/metaheuristic optimisation (e.g
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areas of nanoscience and nanotechnology. Job Title: Research Engineer Research area or group: Nanoscience Instrument Development Division Description of Group/Project: Within the NFFA.EU PILOT European
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areas of nanoscience and nanotechnology. Job Title: Postdoctoral researcher Research area or group: Nanostructured Materials for Photovoltaic Energy Project title: Synthesis and Engineering of Pb-free
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Research Engineer - Tools developer for LSQUANT platform (Theoretical and Computational Nanoscience)
different areas of nanoscience and nanotechnology. Job Title: Research Engineer - Tools developer for LSQUANT platform Research area or group: Theoretical and Computational Nanoscience Group Description
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of results in national/international conferences Requirements: Education: Ph.D. in Chemical Engineering, Electrochemical Engineering, and/or Chemistry. Knowledgeand Professional Experience: Batteries
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Materials and Devices (AEMD) group focuses on the material sciences and technology aspects of novel electronic materials, with a strong emphasis on graphene as well as other 2D materials (MoS2). The group
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technology. The main task and responsibilities will be: Electroactive nanomaterials preparation and their characterization (CV, FTIR, TEM, SEM...) Electrodes preparation and cell assembly. Electrochemical
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Chemistry Description of Group/Project: The NanoElectrocatalysis and Sustainable Chemistry Group combines electrochemistry, materials engineering and in situ characterisation at the atomic scale to elucidate
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/Project: The NanoElectrocatalysis and Sustainable Chemistry Group combines electrochemistry, materials engineering and in situ characterisation at the atomic scale to elucidate design principles