58 phd-in-architecture-interior-design-built-environment PhD positions at University of Birmingham
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Join the School of Physics and Astronomy at the University of Birmingham for groundbreaking PhD research that aims to improve the knowledge of biological macromolecules! The interaction between
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, rebound effects, or synergies (Ekim, Mattsson and Bernardo, 2023; Massié and Belaïd, 2024). Capturing such interactions is crucial for designing effective retrofits. Assessing housing decarbonisation
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The emergence of 3D concrete printing (3DCP) is reshaping the future of construction, offering unprecedented design freedom, material efficiency, and automation. Unlike conventional concrete casting
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sensor designs should achieve high sensitivity to very small pressure change, making them suited to wireless motility sensing. The sensor will be created used microfabrication techniques such as soft
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production from these ecosystems is essential. In coastal environments, the majority of methane is produced by microbial degradation of one-carbon compounds such as methanol, methylamines (MAs) and
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pathways, whilst their omission can introduce significant systematic biases in parameter estimation, detection pipelines, and tests of fundamental physics. In this PhD project, you will develop a
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We invite applications for a fully funded PhD studentship (3.5 years) hosted by the University of Birmingham and conducted in collaboration with Siemens and the UK Met Office. This project is ideal
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probe may be required for the latter. Subsequently, the PhD student will embark on electromagnetic design of metasurfaces combined with spatially selective defect engineering for the realization
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elucidate novel interactions within critical signalling pathways and increase our understanding of signal transduction regulation of fundamental cellular processes. Funding notes: This is a PhD studentship
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planktonic methane sources and methanotroph communities remain unresolved. This PhD will examine how methanotrophs integrate methane derived from sediments and plankton. Field surveys in the UKCEH Cumbrian