Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Employer
- Eindhoven University of Technology (TU/e)
- Delft University of Technology (TU Delft)
- University of Amsterdam (UvA)
- Leiden University
- University of Twente (UT)
- Wageningen University & Research
- Wetsus - European centre of excellence for sustainable water technology
- Maastricht University (UM)
- NIOZ Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research
- University Medical Center Utrecht (UMC Utrecht)
- Utrecht University
- AMOLF
- Eindhoven University of Technology
- Erasmus University Rotterdam
- Radboud University
- University of Groningen
- Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam (VU)
- 7 more »
- « less
-
Field
-
Researcher (R1) Positions PhD Positions Application Deadline 1 May 2026 - 13:45 (Europe/Amsterdam) Country Netherlands Type of Contract Temporary Job Status Full-time Is the job funded through the EU Research
-
needed of how these microtissues remodel and fuse their matrices as they grow, and how this is governed by their mechanical microenvironment. As a PhD candidate, you will develop novel computational tools
-
of Physics at the University of Amsterdam is seeking an ambitious PhD candidate to unravel the complexity of multimineral salt crystallization and its impact on cultural heritage materials. Join Us! Despite
-
the EU Research Framework Programme? Not funded by a EU programme Is the Job related to staff position within a Research Infrastructure? No Offer Description The PhD vacancy is part of the DynamiCity
-
design material and explore an ‘aesthetics of uncertainty’ in the design of smart home systems. Instability is an attribute of dynamical models and systems. With increasing connectivity between different
-
(such as geological maps, material properties, and usage profiles) with dynamic sensor measurements (including pressure, vibration, visual, acoustic, and X-ray signals). The PhD candidate will investigate
-
. Engineering dynamic environments – developing responsive biomaterial microenvironments that guide organoid growth and reveal mechanisms of developmental biology. This PhD position is embedded within a
-
Nikolic’s research group is part of Developmental Psychopathology group at the Research Institute of Child Development and Education. The PhD projects will be co-supervised by Dr Disa Sauter at the University
-
analysis with spatial data to assess cascading supply chain risks and other systemic effects, supported where relevant by system dynamics modelling. Second, the PhD candidate will develop models to assess
-
combine electricity, heat, hydrogen, CO₂, and other energy carriers with greenhouse climate control, resulting in a highly coupled, nonlinear, multi-timescale dynamical system. Your work will focus