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interactions Candidate profile Required qualifications: You must have a two-year master's degree (120 ECTS points) or a similar degree with an academic level equivalent to a two-year master's degree. Ideally
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? During the PhD, the student is expected to interact with academics across different departments from the University of Manchester, e.g. Offshore Renewable Energy Group, the Hydrodynamics Lab, as
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Your job We are looking for a highly motivated PhD candidate in the field of insect-flower-microbe interactions who would like to unravel the effect of nectar microbes on flower visiting insects
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the Soil Ecology Group (Sustainable Land Management Department), led by Prof Mark Tibbett, where they will interact with MSc and PhD students, as well as post-doctorate researchers working on mycorrhizas
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to contact the main supervisor for a discussion about the position, relevant references and the project. For other information, please contact the Dean or the advisors: Main supervisor: Assoc. Prof. Susana
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cooperation. Proficiency in English, and strong communication skills, both oral and written, are required. You are highly motivated, and you like to work in an interactive and dynamic research and clinical team
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, water-air and/or water-sediment interactions, human perturbations, hydrology/limnology, and climate change (shown by a relevant master research project experience or courses); strong analytical skills
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PhD Scholarship in ‘Using nanoparticles to enhance the immune response and improve vaccine efficacy’
This project will examine the immune response to vaccines using various nanoparticle formulations and determine how they interact with cells to generate a strong immune response, capable
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. You will work under the supervision of Prof. Francisco C. Pereira, Assoc. Prof. Carlos Lima Azevedo (DTU), Dr. Biagio Ciuffo and Dr. Georgios Fontaras (JRC). You will work on research focused
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, the main leaving ligands and the major site of action, using for the first time, synchrotron μ-XAS and XFM and vibrational spectroscopic (VS) microscopy in the lead laboratory of Prof. Lay (USyd) in