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to join our dynamic research environment at the Department of Clinical and Molecular Medicine (IKOM), Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU) in
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principles molecular dynamics simulations. You will contribute to the development of novel work flows as well as to the training, testing and application of latest neural network methodologies. Applications
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molecular dynamics (MD) simulations, for example using GROMACS or transition path sampling (TPS) to analyze structural changes over time. Experience in contributing to collaborative research is a plus
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atomistic simulations to overcome the limitations of traditional molecular dynamics approaches, which struggle to capture the experimentally relevant size (20–100 nm) and molecular complexity of LNPs. ML
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different types of simulations at different scales. For the atomic level, you will use atomistic molecular dynamics simulations, which are so expensive computationally that supercomputers are needed
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, reaction kinetics and dynamics, and theory/simulation of ultrafast time-resolved experiments. will be a part of the Physical Chemistry section at DTU Chemistry (https://www.kemi.dtu.dk/english/research
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barrier in the planned KBS-3 concept for final disposal of spent nuclear fuel. The PhD student will develop, apply, and combine theoretical molecular dynamics (MD) simulations with experimental techniques
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. The PhD student will develop, apply, and combine theoretical molecular dynamics (MD) simulations with experimental techniques such as X-ray diffraction (XRD) to characterize, at the molecular level
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barrier in the planned KBS-3 concept for final disposal of spent nuclear fuel. The PhD student will develop, apply, and combine theoretical molecular dynamics (MD) simulations with experimental techniques
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, statistical mechanics, reaction kinetics and dynamics, and theory/simulation of ultrafast time-resolved experiments. You will be a part of the Physical Chemistry section at DTU Chemistry (https