Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Country
-
Employer
- NTNU - Norwegian University of Science and Technology
- Technical University of Denmark
- Trinity College Dublin
- ;
- Aalborg University
- DAAD
- Vrije Universiteit Brussel
- ; Cranfield University
- ; University of Strathclyde
- Curtin University
- University of Southern Denmark
- Wageningen University and Research Center
- 2 more »
- « less
-
Field
-
on his Australian Research Council DECRA Fellowship project “Next-generation floating hybrid offshore wind-wave energy conversion system” along with Professors Wensu Chen and Hong Hao. This project aims
-
carbon emissions reduction targets set out by the UK- and Irish governments up to 2050, Floating Offshore Wind energy will likely play a significant role. Construction of concrete floaters is attractive
-
are looking for a highly motivated and skilled PhD researcher to work on structural surrogates of offshore wind foundations through graph-based machine learning. Our goal is to perform full-structure
-
of monopiles and jackets to depths of 80–100 m. Such solutions for these greater-than-standard depths should provide viable fixed-bottom designs to unlock numerous offshore sites with gigawatts of wind energy
-
“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
-
, 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
-
project and validated in offshore conditions. By unifying aerial, surface, and underwater data through intelligent sensor fusion and coordinated control, the system aims to provide improved situational
-
and AI-based segmentation, with a particular emphasis on inter-vehicle collaboration. The overall goal is to develop robust, scalable methods for detecting and classifying structural anomalies (e.g
-
of anthropogenic structures in the North Sea, most notably due to the expansion of offshore windparks, may have multifaceted effects on marine ecosystems. In addition to the direct consequences of introducing
-
.), including full fees and bursary. Main Copy (advised structure) Green hydrogen has been presented as an important aspect of the renewable energy future not only to decarbonise many industries including steel