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the Condensed Matter and Electroactive Systems team (Rennes). The PhD will be supervised by Cyril Poriel (CNRS Research Director) and Cassandre Quinton (CNRS Researcher). Organic electronics (OE) starts to play a
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Chemistry (LCC, http://www.lcc-toulouse.fr/ ), one of the leading French chemistry institutes. We have at our disposal state-of-the-art technical and analytical platforms for the support of the project (e.g
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responsible for understanding the impact of the object nanostructuring on electronic dynamics in order to better control them within nanostructures optimized for the recycling of CO2 into methane. The PhD
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the PhD). At Sorbonne University, the student will join IMPMC-UMR 7590 (https://impmc.sorbonne-universite.fr/en ). At the University of Melbourne, the student will join the Bio21 Molecular Science
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are particularly interested in the 4-electron reduction of CO₂ in order to achieve complex and original transformations. We now aim to extend this expertise not directly to CO₂ itself, but to carbonate and carbamate
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Versailles (ILV) is a laboratory internationally recognised for its expertise in http://www.ilv.uvsq.fr/ (MOFs). It is a CNRS/UVSQ joint research unit (UMR) established in 2006, bringing together all
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electrochemistry, surface chemistry, organic molecules for electronics and energy storage, and bioelectrochemistry. • The project is coordinated by Dr James Behan, CNRS researcher at the ISCR. • The thesis will be
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PhD position: Nanoengineering refractory compositionally complex alloys for extreme conditions (M/F)
, phases, interfaces). A multi-scale characterization approach (from the nanometer to the micrometer scale) will be employed. At LSPM, advanced micromechanical testing and in situ scanning electron
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well as the understanding of the role of the diversity observed among species. It is however aknowledged that the electrons needed to reduce are primarily brought by quinones (in their quinol form) who transfer them (one by
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. Neutrinos are detected through their interactions with argon nuclei within the LArTPC. These interactions release energetically charged particles that ionize and excite liquid argon. The electrons are moved