12 phd-in-stress-engineer Postdoctoral research jobs at Utrecht University in Netherlands
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
, while working in an ambitious, motivated, and multi-disciplinary team of veterinarians, clinicians, material scientists, biologists, and engineers. You will also participate in the co-supervision of PhD
-
(proven by a PhD) in innovation studies, economic geography, Science and Technology Studies, or a related discipline; You have an affinity with in-depth social research and innovative methodologies with a
-
for plastics using mechanochemistry. You will enter a relatively unexplored field of chemistry together with an expanding team of 5 PhD candidates and an experienced postdoc. The core objective of this project
-
the computational component of the project. You will collaborate closely with the principal investigator, two PhD candidates (working in psycholinguistics and cognitive science) and one postdoctoral researcher
-
retrieval. As a postdoctoral researcher, you will be part of the computational component of the project. You will collaborate closely with the principal investigator, two PhD candidates (working in
-
(UU) and the project itself is a collaboration between Utrecht University and the University of Twente (UT). You will join the existing team of one PD and one PhD student, led by André Niemeijer (UU
-
learning and data augmentation for soil and biomass carbon forecasts; developing a computational framework for data production in cooperation with Research Software Engineers; collaborating and coordinating
-
; developing visualisation prototypes to communicate uncertainty to end-users; contributing to a computational framework for data production in cooperation with Research Software Engineers; working closely with
-
researchers, postdocs, and PhD candidates specialising in operando spectroscopy techniques for catalyst analysis. Your main tasks include: developing a new chemical recycling technology based
-
and one PhD student, led by André Niemeijer (UU), Hongyang Cheng (UT) and Tanmaya Mishra (UT). The project is part of the research programme DEEPNL , funded by the Dutch Research Council (NWO