32 phd-in-concrete-and-structural-engineering PhD positions at University of Cambridge
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A position exists, for a Research Assistant/Associate in the Department of Engineering, to work on structural timber engineering. The post holder will be located in West Cambridge, Cambridgeshire
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PhD Studentship ¿ Refractory High Entropy Superalloys for High-Temperature Applications Funder: EPSRC and Rolls-Royce plcDuration: 3.5 years Supervisors: Prof. Nick Jones & Prof. Howard Stone
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) The University of Cambridge is offering a fully funded PhD studentship within the Structural Materials Group at the Department of Materials Science & Metallurgy. This EPSRC-funded 'Industrial Doctoral Landscape
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PhD Studentship: Development of Next-Generation High-Performance Titanium Alloy for Aerospace Applications Funder: EPSRC and Rolls-Royce plc Duration: 3.5 years Supervisors: Professor Nick Jones and
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. See www.autismresearchcentre.com . We use state-of-the-art technology and methodologies in these investigations, including functional and structural magnetic resonance imaging, induced pluripotent stem
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The British Museum and the University of Cambridge are pleased to announce the availability of a fully funded Collaborative doctoral studentship from October 2025 under the AHRC's Collaborative Doctoral Partnership consortium (https://www.ahrc-cdp.org ). This project aims to explore wider...
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We are seeking an applicant for a fully-funded ERC Research Assistant position with funding to undertake a PhD in analytic number theory led by Dr Joni Teräväinen, in the Department of Pure
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This is a four-year (1+3 MRes/PhD) studentship funded through the Cambridge EPSRC Centre for Doctoral Training in Future Infrastructure and Built Environment: Unlocking Net Zero (FIBE3 CDT
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mode of action while rational (structure-guided) antibiotic discovery has proved impossible in most cases because of a failure to understand the permeability, retention, and metabolism of chemicals. We
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catalytically active metals to drive chemical reactions with light [3-4]. The specific goals of this PhD project are to 1) understand how plasmonic Mg nanoparticles and their surface oxide layer attract and