Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Country
-
Field
-
are promising sustainable alternatives to lithium-ion systems, leveraging abundant, low-cost materials (Na, Fe, Al, biomass-derived carbon). However, a major bottleneck is the instability of the SEI formed during
-
new sustainable femtosecond laser nanomanufacturing process to overcome the challenges of atomic sale precision, feature size and defects rates for quantum dots. In this project, molecular dynamics
-
is working to be the state’s world-class cancer research institute, jointly resourced by the Federal Department of Health, CALHN and the University of Adelaide. Reporting to Associate Prof. Robin Hobbs
-
Job Description Could you imagine designing clusters for catalyzing chemical reactions at the atomic-scale? The Center for Visualizing Catalytic Processes (VISION) is offering a PhD positions for
-
Research Studentship in ‘Deformation and fracture of TRISO fuel particles’ 3.5-year DPhil studentship Supervisor: Prof Dong Liu, Prof Emilio Martinez-Paneda About the Project The proposed PhD
-
: The successful candidate will investigate ion transport through atomically thin membranes made of 2D polymers and graphene derivatives in close collaboration with experimental partner groups MPI Halle and Leiden
-
Closing Date: 15th September 2025 [23:59 GMT] Supervisor: Prof M. Sumetsky Prospective Start Date: 1 January 2026 Applications are invited for a Postgraduate studentship, supported by Aston
-
Position Description The Unsteady Flow Diagnostics Laboratory (UNFoLD) led by Prof. Karen Mulleners at EPFL in Lausanne is looking for multiple PhD students to join the group in the fall of 2025 or early
-
Chair of Biological Imaging 07.08.2025, Wissenschaftliches Personal We are now looking for a highly qualified and motivated researcher with an engineering or physics background (f/m/x) and a
-
Primary supervisor - Prof Katharine Hendry (British Antarctic Survey & UEA Honorary Professor) Secondary supervisor - Prof Dorothee Bakker Fragile polar ecosystems are critical to the global