38 development-"https:"-"https:"-"https:" PhD positions at The University of Manchester
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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 deadline. The project is to contribute to a major Ministry of Defence (MOD) research programme intended to develop generation after next technologies for applications in defence and security, and this
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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
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. Their performance, however, is strongly influenced by microtexture, crystallographic orientation clusters that develop in the material during processing. Controlling microtexture is critical for improving mechanical
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developing next-generation technologies. In this PhD project, you will employ atomistic spin-lattice dynamics simulations, a framework that combines atomistic spin dynamics with molecular dynamics
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laboratories based at the Dept of Chemistry, University of Manchester. The studentship is available from Sept 2026 and tenable for 3.5 years. The project will develop new approaches to novel nucleosides via
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of therapeutic cells or biomolecular cargo, and We further propose that by understanding and tuning the fluorescence mechanisms of C-dots, we can develop reliable nanosensors for real-time bioanalytical readouts
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, such links have predominantly been directly from a wind farm to shore (point-to-point). However, proposals are developing for multi-terminal grids for improved reliability and asset utilisation. Proposals
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focused on methodology development, providing excellent all-round training in practical organic synthesis with particular emphasis on contemporary photochemistry. You gain extensive experience in analytical
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features such as curvature, branching, bifurcations, narrowing, and local dilations. This PhD project aims to develop a ‘haemodynamic fingerprinting’ framework that systematically links arterial geometry