23 postdoctoral-soil-structure-interaction-fem-dynamics PhD positions at University of Nottingham
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Fully Funded PhD Studentship: Micromechanics of Grain-Interface Interactions (Soil-Structure Interaction) Background Are abrasive grains truly "indestructible"? Research in our leading experimental
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3-year PhD studentship: Scaling-Up Functional 3D Printing of Devices and Structures Supervisors: Professor Richard Hague1 , Professor Chris Tuck1 , Dr Geoffrey Rivers1 (1 Faculty of Engineering) PhD
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PhD project: 3D-Printing Devices with Responsive Structural Colour Applications are invited for a PhD project within the University of Nottingham’s Faculty of Engineering, in the Centre for Additive
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) models for laser-material interaction, gas dynamics and phase change Implement GPU-efficient algorithms and meshing strategies for substantial speed-ups Validate against MTC laser drilling use-cases and
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for laser-material interaction, gas dynamics and phase change Implement GPU-efficient algorithms and meshing strategies for substantial speed-ups Validate against MTC laser drilling use-cases and
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fucosylation (and glycosylation) of proteins modulate their structure, stability and function. FUT2 has been implicated in several biological processes including modifying mucins (e.g. glycosylation of MUC5AC
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of the modern age. What if there was another way? What if we could utilise the very land that lies at the foot of wind or solar farms? By pumping water into a sealed flexible membrane under a mass of soil we can
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would then be correlated, using the synchrotron light, to structural, chemical and electronic changes in the single metal atom at different steps in the catalytic reaction. Using the synchrotron light we
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for fusion components. This framework foresees two building blocks: high-fidelity Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) simulations of boiling flows within complex geometry using opensource software and cutting
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, and materials science. PhD project description: Responsive 3D-printed functional devices interact with their environment, responding to stimuli (temperature, light, etc.), and “4D-printed” devices