Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
PhD project: 3D-Printing Devices with Responsive Structural Colour Applications are invited for a PhD project within the University of Nottingham’s Faculty of Engineering, in the Centre for Additive
-
3-year PhD studentship: Scaling-Up Functional 3D Printing of Devices and Structures Supervisors: Professor Richard Hague1 , Professor Chris Tuck1 , Dr Geoffrey Rivers1 (1 Faculty of Engineering) PhD
-
Fully-funded PhD Studentship: Adaptive Mesh Refinement for More Efficient Predictions of Wall Boiling Bubble Dynamics This exciting opportunity is based within the Fluids and Thermal Engineering
-
PhD Studentship – New approaches for studying the structure of high-temperature molten materials Transition: (October 2025 start) Supervisor 1: Emma Barney Supervisor 2: Oliver Alderman (ISIS
-
) are linear sugars that are displayed on all cells throughout the body as well as in the matrix. Like other glycans, they are not built against a defined template, and yet their structure is non-random, with
-
, usability, and insight into leakage dynamics across diverse constructions. Research Objectives The project is structured around three synergistic work packages: Descriptive Analytics: You will conduct a
-
to another that can be viewed as heteroclinic connections between phase-locked states. The PhD project will consider the role that communication delays between nodes can have in shaping patterns of dynamic
-
integrates dynamic “smart” materials into 3D-printed structures, opens new frontiers in both bioelectronics and solar energy harvesting. Our goal is to create adaptive electrode architectures. These advanced
-
energy and aerospace solutions. In particular, surface-mounted permanent magnet electrical machines are pushing performance boundaries. A major challenge is the structural integrity of the carbon-fibre
-
Glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) are linear sugars that are displayed on all cells throughout the body as well as in the matrix. Like other glycans, they are not built against a defined template, and yet their structure is