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. Empa is a research institution of the ETH Domain. In our research group, we transfer membrane and encapsulation strategies from academia to industry. Solution-based processes like electrospinning and
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project “DepoIon”, we develop physical vapor deposition (PVD) process control for solid state battery relevant material coatings. Your tasks You will work on basic science topics as well as on applied
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. Empa is a research institution of the ETH Domain. The Laboratory of Advanced Materials Processing (LAMP) is a multidisciplinary research unit that develops innovative functional modification of materials
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product quality attributes, such as remaining shelf life. Process measured sensor data of commercial cold chains, analyze data for variability, and reformat data in databases. Use the simulation-based
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specifically to XRD-PDF (pair distribution function). The project is linked to crystalline and amorphous alloys, and in an industrial context to process design by establishing the structure-property relationship
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match the chemical, mechanical, and morphological properties of native bone. The role of the PhD student at Empa will be the development of synthesis processes using light-based 3D printing of hydrogel
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that the generated knowledge will advance the field of sustainable material technologies and contribute to new developments within advanced manufacturing, biopolymers, surface and interface science and biomedical
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for biomedical applications. Your tasks Study the joint assembly of biopolymer in compartmentalized or bulk hydrogels. Characterize the resulting physical hydrogel properties as well as how these properties can be
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solid-state batteries. One of research topics is the method of flash-lamp annealing ( FLA, also called intense pulsed light or photonic curing ), which is used for thermal processing of thin films with
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material processing and assembly strategies. Your tasks Study the triggered enzymatic crosslinking and disassembly of single biopolymer systems. Characterize the evolution of the structure of the biopolymers