Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Country
-
Employer
- Argonne
- University of Antwerp
- University of Oxford
- ;
- Cornell University
- Fritz Haber Institute of the Max Planck Society, Berlin
- MOHAMMED VI POLYTECHNIC UNIVERSITY
- NTNU - Norwegian University of Science and Technology
- Nature Careers
- Purdue University
- University of Maryland
- University of Minnesota
- 2 more »
- « less
-
Field
-
phenomena Create new reduced-order models and submodels related to fluid flow, heat transfer, thermochemistry, and electrochemistry in multiphase systems Use modeling tools such as computational fluid
-
engineering and nuclear-chemical engineering systems Create new reduced-order models and submodels related to the fluid flow, heat transfer, thermochemistry, and electrochemistry in multiphase systems Use
-
effort on active research projects and publish and present research results. Research work will focus on Computation Fluid Dynamics (CFD) models involving multiphase reacting flow simulations with emphasis
-
will be part of a team working overall on the implementation of 5D ED to solve and map the structures within multiphased particles during reactions and during changes in the environment. Each team
-
, energy engineering or a closely related discipline. Experience in modeling & simulation of three-dimensional multiphase turbulent reacting flow applications using 3-D CFD codes (e.g., CONVERGE, OpenFOAM
-
. Requirements A Ph.D. in an engineering discipline. The candidate must have relevant background in at least two of the following areas: Solid mechanics, Transport phenomena, Computational modeling, Multiphase
-
discipline. Experience with modeling three-dimensional multiphase turbulent reacting flow applications using CFD codes (e.g., CONVERGE, OpenFOAM, etc.). Experience with multi-dimensional CFD internal
-
(multiphase flow, phase change materials, nanoscale transport), microfabrication, electrochemistry, microfluidic visualization methods, CFD/2-phase simulations, nanoscale thermal/electrical mobility simulations