60 channel-coding-electrical-engineering PhD positions at Technical University of Denmark in Denmark
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
. The applicant should have: A PhD in meteorology, climatology or other related fields Experience in mesoscale modelling, preferably WRF Experience of scientific programming and running code on HPC systems
-
Job Description The Department of Civil and Mechanical Engineering of the Technical University of Denmark (DTU) has an open PhD position on the topic of “Automated machine polishing of complex mould
-
integration of pit thermal energy storage in thermal grids Collaboration with KTH Royal Institute of Technology on building-integrated thermal energy storage Work as an assistant teacher in relevant courses
-
) develop and optimize extraction techniques using enzymes in combination with non-thermal technologies such as ultrasound, ohmic heating, and pulsed electric fields, (iii) evaluate the techno-functional
-
to current literature and published in conference and journal articles. You are required to have an excellent academic background and must have a strong knowledge of production engineering technologies and
-
universities, and three research and technology organizations—you will be at the forefront of shaping the future. This PhD project offers you the opportunity to develop cutting-edge competencies in digital
-
background are encouraged to apply. As DTU works with research in critical technology, which is subject to special rules for security and export control, open-source background checks may be conducted
-
engineering challenge. Key to success will be the development of cost competitive and reliable methods to produce hydrogen via electrolysis of water/steam driven by green electricity. Hydrogen can be used as a
-
Photonics 17, 386–392 (2023). About the Quantum and Nanophotonics section at DTU Electro The Department of Electrical and Photonics Engineering has nearly 300 employees of which around 200 research different
-
scientific backgrounds, including electrical engineering, industrial engineering, operations research, data science, and applied mathematics. Many of our former students are now successful scientists in both