Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
the Interfacial Processes Group (Chemical Sciences and Engineering Division), will use a combination of synchrotron X-ray based tools (e.g., X-ray reflectivity, tomographic imaging, x-ray diffraction, spectroscopy
-
source for EIC and the design of the ePIC Barrel Imaging Calorimeter. Argonne National Laboratory, situated near Chicago, is a prominent multidisciplinary science and engineering research center. We are
-
for such models include high-resolution 3D imaging, time-resolved materials characterization, and atomic structure determination. Scientific instrument data is often multimodal in nature and developing DL models
-
The Applied Materials Division, Process R&D and Scale up Group is seeking a postdoctoral candidate to conduct general research in material science and electrochemistry related to next generation
-
multidisciplinary team, the Postdoctoral Appointee will work at the intersection of AI/ML, climate science, and high-performance computing. The candidate will develop LLMs specifically designed to understand, process
-
decarbonization applications. With guidance, the appointee will: Develop advanced multiscale, multiphysics simulation tools applicable to the modeling of chemical processes and equipment relevant to chemical
-
information Ability to model Argonne’s Core Values: Impact, Safety, Respect, Integrity, and Teamwork Desired skills, knowledge and abilities: Experience with large-scale molecular dynamics (MD) simulations
-
The Applied Materials Division (AMD) at Argonne National Laboratory is seeking to hire a Post-doctoral Researcher. The candidate will work within a multidisciplinary team with researchers
-
The Chemical and Fuel Cycle Technologies division at Argonne is seeking a Postdoctoral Appointee to join a multidisciplinary team developing molten salt-based chemical and electrochemical processes
-
exploration of time-resolved imaging of material behavior using advanced ultrafast electron microscopy techniques. The in-situ experiments will be driven by external electric fields and relevant optical stimuli