Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Employer
-
Field
-
-physical energy systems. About the project AI:X is an ambitious initiative at Aalborg University that aims to advance AI research and create real-world impact through interdisciplinary collaboration, and
-
Job Description We offer you a unique opportunity to join the PlastChain project with the aim to develop a process for chemically recycling end of life plastic waste by gasification to form syngas
-
crucial role in the modelling, design, and optimization of various systems in product and process engineering. Despite significant progress made over the decades, existing thermodynamic models and theories
-
bioelectrochemistry, a process utilizing electrochemistry to drive redox reactions catalyzed by enzymes. This technology has a large potential ranging from health (biosensors, biofuel cells) to “power-to-X
-
of wind turbines. Despite remarkable progress in structural health monitoring boosted by AI, purely data-driven models have no physical interpretability and poor generalization capabilities. Thus
-
to contribute to the groups ongoing work on integrating environmental issues into macroeconomic models with the purpose of providing an assessment of the financial stability and physical risks given
-
theory. The PhD fellow will join the Human Augmentation and Collaboration (HAC) group and the Physical and Embodied Interaction (PEI) group. The HAC group designs and evaluates interactive systems
-
using signal changes to learn about the weather and take appropriate action. By combining AI with physics and real-time data, the project improves weather forecasts and makes communication systems more
-
environment with new knowledge on moisture transfer and storage process in biobased porous materials? These materials are essential for the green transition but vulnerable to moisture loads. To address
-
successful candidate will join the section of fundamental physics to work with Associate Professor Sofie Marie Koksbang as part of the project “Unlocking the Power of Cosmography: A New Test of Our