65 phd-rehabilitation-engineering-computer-science Postdoctoral research jobs at Argonne
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is typically achieved through a formal education in chemical engineering, chemistry, materials science, nuclear engineering, mechanical engineering, or related field at the PhD degree level with zero
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We are seeking a highly motivated Postdoctoral Researcher with expertise in computational biology, deep mutational scanning data, and generative artificial intelligence (AI). The successful
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Argonne is a multidisciplinary science and engineering research center, where talented scientists, engineers, and business professionals work together to answer the biggest questions facing humanity
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computer science or related computational engineering disciplines. Experience with simulation frameworks for complex computer systems and architectures. Some knowledge of accelerator (CUDA, SYCL, HIP) and scientific
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of deposition science and heterogenous interfaces. Position Requirements: A PhD in chemistry, materials science or related field; received within the last 5 years or upcoming year. Significant written and oral
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The Nuclear Science and Engineering (NSE) Division is seeking a postdoctoral appointee to develop computational methods and computer codes to model the physics and engineering of advanced nuclear
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The Chemical Sciences and Engineering Division is seeking applicants for a postdoctoral appointee who will conduct computational research in Selective Interface Reactions (e.g., atomic layer
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The Chemical Sciences and Engineering (CSE) Division is seeking applicants for a postdoctoral appointee who will conduct computational research in Catalysis Science. The project involves performing
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to state-of-the-art research facilities and gain in-depth knowledge of the research frontiers of in situ characterization of deposition science and electrochemical interfaces. Position Requirements: A PhD in
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should have a strong background in experimental physics and/or engineering, or in a relevant field. Experience in superconducting qubits, nanofabrication, photonics, and low-temperature experiments