24 professor-computer-science-"https:"-"https:"-"https:"-"https:"-"UCL" PhD positions at University of Birmingham
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Are you an outstanding and ambitious engineering or computer science graduate looking for the next challenge? Do you want to work at the frontier of artificial intelligence and robotics to enable
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, including bacterial genetics, protein-ligand interactions, advanced cellular and ex vivo models of human skin, and formulation engineering. The project will be supervised by Professor Joan Geoghegan
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This project will develop advanced computational and experimental tools to support the safe, efficient, and scalable manufacture of materials critical to UK and European security, with a particular
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on the degree to which air quality controllability might be affected by SRM using chemistry-climate and chemistry-transport model simulations. You will investigate how an enhanced stratospheric aerosol layer
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the confinement of metal-organic frameworks (MOFs, Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 2025) as a case study, based on our pioneering work on shock absorption in hydrophobic cavities1. MOFs can offer tiny hydrophobic pores
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group, in the School of Engineering, University of Birmingham. The PhD project: Antennas are a key component of communication and sensing systems; however, existing antenna technologies suffer from a
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is funded by the University of Birmingham and is open to UK students only. We typically require a 2(i) degree in a relevant subject (life or physical sciences). References: 1. Whittle EE, McNeil HE
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- or part-time research programme. This includes current doctoral researchers in the College of Arts and Law. The funding will be available from September 2026. One scholarship is available offering
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candidate with an undergraduate degree (2:1 minimum) in chemistry, chemical engineering or materials science. Supervisors: Dr Sophie Pain, Dr Rob Sommerville, Dr Elizabeth (Lizzie) Driscoll. References: 1
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Health emergencies, mass casualty events and disasters generate large volumes of operational, clinical and organisational data. However, these data are rarely synthesised into structured, analysable records that can systematically inform preparedness, training and future...