29 medical-computer-engineering Postdoctoral positions at University of Minnesota in United-States
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Class Acad Prof and Admin Add to My Favorite Jobs Email this Job About the Job The Department of Bioproducts and Biosystems Engineering at University of Minnesota, Twin Cities, has an opening for a full
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to lead a project related to the transport of bacteria in porous media and multiphase flow. A PhD degree in engineering or earth science is needed. 75% - Conduct laboratory experiments related
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have a PhD in environmental engineering, earth or environmental engineering, or related fields, with a background in ecohydrology. Experience in ecohydrological modeling and remote sensing is desired
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related to engineering specialized metabolite biosynthetic pathways Essential and Other Functions: (40%) molecular biology and microbiology (50%) Data analysis (10%) Prepare manuscripts and communications
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collaborates with other fields such as chemistry, computer science, engineering, linguistics, mathematics, medicine and allied disciplines, philosophy, physics, and psychology. The Department of Neuroscience is
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of Civil, Environmental, and Geo- Engineering. The person would take the lead on a project co-supervised by Profs. Behrens and Arnold to evaluate microbial degradation of fluorinated pesticides and
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using advanced computation tools (cloud system and supercomputer) and data analytics tools is also preferred. About the Department The Department of Bioproducts and Biosystems Engineering (bbe.umn.edu) is
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and various watershed management districts across the metro) to achieve project research and technology transfer objectives. We seek an energetic scientist committed to conducting research to understand
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. However, limited availability of peritoneal dialysate has limited the impact of past attempts to introduce PD as a treatment modality. The technology being developed in our lab is a biopharmaceutical device
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in science and engineering, chemistry is critical for solving society's most important problems and making significant positive impacts on human health, energy, and the environment. The UMN Department