Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Program
-
Field
-
Organic quantum batteries: the development of high-performance energy storage devices (S3.5-MPS-Lidzey) School of Mathematical and Physical Sciences PhD Research Project Competition Funded Students
-
, electricity is generated by using the heat from nuclear reactions to produce steam and drive turbines. This is an inefficient process, with up to two-thirds of nuclear heat energy lost during the process of
-
computational fluid dynamics and thermodynamics, an understanding of manufacturing considerations, especially safety concerns, process design, and the operation of a range of manufacturing tools and machines
-
. These solvents cause a number of challenges and problems, including issues with solvent toxicity, high energy usage which increases the carbon cost of batteries, and electrode structural problems. Because
-
of these. Understanding how to control product composition and purity is critical to achieving high-quality fertilisers. We will also design the novel materials so that they display enhanced soil uptake and reduced run-off
-
for meetings will be reimbursed). The successful applicant will gain high quality training within paranoia and clinical psychology research, and delivery of semi-structured psychosocial assessments, receive
-
to carry out high-performance numerical simulations using our in-house CFD code, extract physical insights from simplified flow models, and characterise synchronisation thresholds and the robustness
-
largest published cohort of adult ataxia patients. External collaborators include NVIDIA, providing access to high-performance computing and advanced AI frameworks (e.g. NeMo, Parakeet), and Professor Anja
-
-sequence in a biorefinery as a superstructure optimization problem 2. Develop algorithms to solve the challenging superstructure optimization problem 3. Find the optimal unit operation and materials
-
performed well in Domino’s preliminary in-house trials. This copolymer was prepared directly in aqueous media using a technique called polymerisation-induced self-assembly (PISA). Prof. Armes is one