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AI-Driven Digital Twin for Predictive Maintenance in Aerospace – In Partnership with Rolls-Royce PhD
Fully funded PhD at Cranfield University, supported by the EPSRC DTP and Rolls-Royce. This 3-year project covers tuition fees, a tax-free stipend, and funding for training, conferences, and a
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supporting the Net Zero 2050 target. This PhD project will develop an AI-enabled framework that optimizes wind turbine control and predictive maintenance. Using Deep Reinforcement Learning (DRL), the system
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Cranfield University and Magdrive, offer a fully funded PhD position under the umbrella of the R2T2 consortium to study the optimisation of their thruster for a kick stage. R2T2 is a UKSA-funded
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This PhD opportunity at Cranfield University invites ambitious candidates to explore the frontier of energy-efficient intelligent systems by embedding AI into low-power, long-life hardware platforms
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This PhD opportunity at Cranfield University invites candidates to explore the integration of AI into certification and lifecycle monitoring processes for safety-critical systems. The project delves
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This PhD opportunity at Cranfield University explores how next-generation AI models can be embedded within resource-constrained electronic systems to enable intelligent, real-time performance
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This PhD at Cranfield University explores the development of resilient, AI-enabled electronic systems capable of detecting faults and autonomously recovering from failures in real time. The project
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We are seeking a highly motivated candidate to undertake a PhD program titled "3D Temperature Field Reconstruction from Local Temperature Monitoring in Directed Energy Deposition." This exciting
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This is a self-funded PhD position to work with Dr Adnan Syed in the Surface Engineering and Precision Centre. The PhD project will focus studying high temperature corrosion mechanisms in details
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We are looking for a highly motivated candidate to pursue a PhD programme titled "CFD-informed finite element analysis for thermal control in wire-arc directed energy deposition." This research