16 parallel-processing-bioinformatics "Multiple" PhD positions at University of Birmingham
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focus on resonant acoustic mixing (RAM) - a relatively novel and increasingly important class of process equipment attracting growing industrial interest across multiple sectors. At its core, the project
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measurements and integrated into multiple national central facilities, including the Central Laser Facility (CLF), the ISIS Neutron and Muon Source (ISIS), and the Diamond Light Source (Diamond). All three
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populations to minimise contact between people and limit opportunities for transmission. They encompass multiple measures and behaviours including workplace closures, working from home, closure of non-essential
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preparedness, and support more equitable and effective future responses. The project will examine how data from multiple sources, including health services, emergency responders, public health agencies and
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environment and will receive training across multiple disciplines including: • Microbiology and microbiome science • Bioreactor engineering and microbial culture systems • Biomaterials and formulation science
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There is growing UK and international interest in networked sensing and autonomous collaborative platforms, where multiple airborne sensors co-operate to collect and exploit data. In contrast
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the psychosocial processes that drive behavioural tipping points; those moments when drivers begin to engage in maladaptive behaviour (e.g. rule-bending, blocking, queue-jumping). The student will also examine
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using conventional antimicrobial approaches. A critical early step in S. aureus skin colonisation is adhesion to corneocytes within the stratum corneum. This process is mediated by bacterial cell wall
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project will develop the first sustainable, closed-loop recycling process for polymer-bonded NdFeB magnets. The research will harness chemical recycling approaches to selectively dissolve the polymer matrix
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. The project will build on existing processes for battery recycling and iterate on these to develop protocols specific to PV modules. Both end-of-life and state-of-the-art modules will be considered, to ensure