13 structural-engineering-"https:"-"https:"-"https:"-"https:"-"https:" PhD positions at University of Birmingham in United Kingdom
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component’s melting point) concomitantly worsened by steady-state heat loads (up to ~15 MW/m2). Fourthly, transient heat loads, going up to a few GW/m2 pose a major structural damage challenge under plasma
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Programme grant can be found at https://oncoeng.org/ Funding notes: The PhD project is funded through a University of Birmingham, School of Engineering PhD scholarship which provides maintenance
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at temperatures orders of magnitude below those of interstellar space and studying their magnetic, structural and electrical properties. As a student, unusually for the field, you will experience all parts
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SMEs to large global manufacturers. For more information, please visit the MTC website: https://www.birmingham.ac.uk/research/centres-institutes/research-in-mechanical-engineering/sustainable
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The construction of demonstration-class fusion tokamak reactors requires a wide range of structural materials, each with the mechanical performance and integrity required for the expected local
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group, in the School of Engineering, University of Birmingham. The PhD project: Antennas are a key component of communication and sensing systems; however, existing antenna technologies suffer from a
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strategy workshops, exploring the global implications of SRM research. What we are looking for: Research Associate: PhD in atmospheric science or physics, civil and environmental or aerospace engineering, or
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of flexible trailing edge with both hydrodynamics and acoustics. The simulation results will be analyzed and compared with analytical models, and then inform a refined low-order taking flow-structure-acoustics
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collected regularly from sewage-impacted rivers and from properties affected by flood events. Data will be analyses using advanced bioinformatics to characterise community structure, resistance genes and
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This project is an exciting opportunity to undertake industrially linked research in partnership with the Manufacturing Technology Centre (MTC). It is based within the Birmingham Institute