20 parallel-processing-bioinformatics-"https:" PhD positions at University of Birmingham in United Kingdom
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
focus on resonant acoustic mixing (RAM) - a relatively novel and increasingly important class of process equipment attracting growing industrial interest across multiple sectors. At its core, the project
-
will explore public, stakeholder, and decision-maker perspectives on lockdown strategies, exit processes, and communications. Using co-design workshop methods, the student will develop a prototype
-
applicants from diverse subject backgrounds. Candidates with expertise in areas such as microbiology, molecular biology, or chemical/biochemical engineering (e.g. reactor or process engineering) are encouraged
-
fracture which made lead to spinal cord injury. The PhD project aims to mitigate the effects of the cancer to weaken bone through insertion of a novel device using keyhole surgery. The project is aligned
-
. The Materials for eXtremes (M4X) research group (https://more.bham.ac.uk/M4X/ ) investigates new alloys for extreme environments from fusion & fission reactors, to aerospace gas turbines and concentrated solar
-
systems and tools to respond using an ‘all hazards’ approach. For more information, please see: https://www.birmingham.ac.uk/research/centres-institutes/nihr-health-protection-research-unit-in-emergency
-
applicable across emergency preparedness and response settings. For more information, please see: https://www.birmingham.ac.uk/research/centres-institutes/nihr-health-protection-research-unit-in-emergency
-
testing, flight dynamics and control. How to apply: The application will be made through the university’s online application system (https://sits.bham.ac.uk/lpages/EPS024.htm). Please provide a cover letter
-
the psychosocial processes that drive behavioural tipping points; those moments when drivers begin to engage in maladaptive behaviour (e.g. rule-bending, blocking, queue-jumping). The student will also examine
-
using conventional antimicrobial approaches. A critical early step in S. aureus skin colonisation is adhesion to corneocytes within the stratum corneum. This process is mediated by bacterial cell wall