32 postdoctoral-composite-materials-simulation PhD positions at University of Nottingham
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Research Groups at the Faculty of Engineering, which conduct cutting-edge research into electric propulsion systems, composite materials, and advanced simulation technologies. Vision We are seeking a highly
-
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
-
ITP Aero Funded PhD – Characterisation of thin sheet and foil material behaviour for aerospace forming applications Applications are invited for a PhD position at the University of Nottingham
-
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
-
PhD Studentship: Towards Sustainable Powertrains: Enabling High Motor Performance without Rare Earth Materials and Energy intensive Manufacturing Processes The University of Nottingham This project
-
Computation and Data Driven Design of Materials for Onboard Ammonia Cracking This exciting opportunity is based within the Advanced Materials Research Group at the Faculty of Engineering which
-
PhD Studentship: Rolls-Royce Sponsored PhD Scholarship – Micromechanics and In-Depth Materials Analysis of Advanced Aerospace Materials Upon the Manufacturing Process Engineering Applications
-
an assessment of the part quality; this will involve the development of laser beam processing on specific aerospace materials, and a model to understand the fundamental mechanisms of the process to identify
-
of mechanical and robotic systems •Ability to use finite element modelling and to simulate complex mechatronics •Ability to implement control and kinematics with hardware-in-the–loop •Background with relevant
-
, and materials science. PhD project description: Responsive 3D-printed functional devices interact with their environment, responding to stimuli (temperature, light, etc.), and “4D-printed” devices