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PhD student(s) will join a vibrant team of postdocs, academics, and up to four PhD students working collaboratively across modelling, qualitative fieldwork, and optimisation techniques. PhD Research
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the structure present in food systems dictates functional aspects such as digestion and release of nutrients. Working alongside other postdocs and students focused more on biological aspects of these processes
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group, we synthesise these functional nanomaterials from the bottom-up, using protocols of molecular beam epitaxy and on-surface supramolecular chemistry. We study these systems by means
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theoretical colleagues. All research takes place within our dynamic particle physics research group with academics and postdocs, as well as graduate and undergraduate students. Some work will be purely
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known as Team COMPAS -- includes a number of amazing undergraduate and graduate students, postdocs, alumni, and other fantastic collaborators. Please contact me if you are interested in joining our group
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acute pathology. The development of such a molecular imaging probe for direct and sensitive detection of fibrosis during the early stages of pathology would represent a true breakthrough in the field
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dynamics model that incorporates a range of net zero technologies and lifestyle solutions along with social and political drivers and barriers to adoption. By doing so, it will guide and enable policymakers
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grow new materials by molecular beam epitaxy, or create heterostructures of materials by exfoliating and stacking atomically thin layers from crystals, and fabricate nanoscale electronic devices
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Fellowship at LMU Munich, and a postdoc position at RMIT University. My nanophotonics research seeks to uncover the underlying physics in structured light-matter interactions at nanoscale. We aim to develop
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-field imaging of dynamic processes" "Multi-scale X-ray speckle-based imaging" "Spectral X-ray speckle-based imaging" "Single-shot multi-projection X-ray phase-contrast imaging" "X-ray virtual histology