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“Multiscale modelling of soil-structure interaction for renewable energy applications”. An improved understanding of soil-structure interface behaviour can lead to significant cost savings for offshore wind
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, Structural & Environmental Engineering, Trinity College Dublin, invites applications for a PhD Researcher to join the geotechnical research group as part of a Sustainable Energy of Ireland funded research
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manufacturing using single cell omicsSupervisors: Colin Clarke and Niall BarronAbout the project: The study of cellular biology has been transformed by single cell analysis. Rapid technological advances in areas
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are part of a larger project that seeks to integrate experimental and theoretical approaches to build sustainable synthetic platforms aligned with renewable energy technologies. The successful applicants
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techniques including culturing of microorganisms, isolating and culturing of immune cells, and constructing genetically modified microorganisms. The students will use molecular, cell biology and protein
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that these cells could be deployed to control intracellular S. aureus. The project will employ cutting edge technologies (transcriptomics, in vivo infection models, single cell metabolic analysis) to profile
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the value of diversity amongst its staff. We encourage applicants to consult our policies at https://www.ucc.ie/en/edi/policies/ and initiatives at https://www.ucc.ie/en/edi/implementation/ and we welcome
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remains scarce, predominantly U.S.-focused, and lacks causal evidence that accounts for different institutional and policy contexts. The PhD project will address these gaps by employing advanced
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, milestones, deliverables and/or research outputs. Keep appropriate records as directed and write reports in line with funder/university policy. Contribute to the development and support of additional project
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policy translation, stakeholder engagement, public communication, interdisciplinary collaboration, and project management — all of which are relevant for academic careers as well as roles in the public