34 postdoc-finite-element-microstructure Postdoctoral positions at University of Oxford
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. At the Dunn School we are committed to supporting the professional and career development of our postdocs and research staff. To help them thrive and achieve their ambitions, we have created a comprehensive
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postdocs and research staff. To help them thrive and achieve their ambitions, we have created a comprehensive range of opportunities and initiatives designed to provide an exceptional launchpad
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to less experienced members of the research group, including postdocs, research assistants, technicians, and PhD and project students. In this post you will manage your own academic research and
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development of our postdocs and research staff. To help them thrive and achieve their ambitions, we have created a comprehensive range of opportunities and initiatives designed to provide an exceptional
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incorporated into cellular function. We are now looking for a postdoc with expertise in IDPs and NMR that can help us study these systems in more detail. Training will be provided in NMR, programming methods
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2022, PMID: 36462505). The research will be conducted in a friendly and supportive atmosphere with access to outstanding facilities and within a vibrant postdoc community. The applicant should hold, or
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incorporated into cellular function. We are now looking for a postdoc to study the physicochemical properties of membraneless organelles and the links to neurodegenerative disease. The candidate will have
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months. The project involves the scale-up of new hierarchical metal oxides and hydroxides and is funded by the UCSF (Oxford University Challenge Seed Fund). Find out more about the O'Hare research and
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the project will focus on developing a thermal water splitting process based on complex transition metal oxides, and then studying the kinetics of the process to facilitate the design of a reactor to integrate
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nanotubes, enables the exploration of thermodynamic processes at the nanoscale. Carbon nanotubes serve as exceptional nanomechanical resonators due to their low mass, high stiffness, and quality factor