41 development-"https:"-"https:"-"https:" PhD positions at The University of Manchester
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, stiffness loss, damage evolution, and transient creep interact under coupled loading. The project will develop temperature-dependent constitutive models informed by numerical simulation. Machine learning
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digital twins with quantified uncertainty. This project will develop a measurement-science-driven digital twin framework for energy assets, initially demonstrated on PV modules/fields and battery systems
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clinical applications. This PhD studentship will develop next-generation polymer drug delivery implants designed to form in situ and enable tuneable release pathways. By controlling polymer architecture
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the most efficient perovskite PVs rely on environmentally harmful compounds. Developing stable and eco-friendly materials and devices could lead to significant breakthroughs for the future photovoltaics
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they operate their aircraft. This project aims to develop metallic coatings for corrosion protection of components used at high temperature; similar environment as in aero-engine. The project will involves close
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, heat removal, and temperature feedback. This PhD will develop and validate an integrated, computationally efficient modelling workflow for monolithic HPCR systems, coupling deterministic reactor physics
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developed with human creators in mind. For example, should machine-generated output be subject to copyright? What degree of human involvement is necessary for copyright to subsist? Who should be the owner
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motivated students, and EPR/MOF experts. As part of the project, the student will receive training in EPR, NMR, XRD, XPS, TEM. The PhD programme incorporates strong career development elements enabling
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for continuous development through training courses offered by the University (e.g., coding skills, writing skills, etc), conference attendance and meetings with the industrial partner. This project will be
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, the PhD student will develop a molecular-level understanding of what governs selectivity in complex liquid-phase environments. The project is placed in a broader context of valorising waste-derived