75 embedded-system-"https:"-"https:"-"https:"-"https:"-"U.S" Postdoctoral positions at Argonne
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primary goal of this work is aimed at advancing next-generation, lithium-ion technology through a detailed understanding and mitigation of surface degradation mechanisms that limit state-of-the-art lithium
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Argonne National Laboratory is seeking a Postdoctoral Appointee to work in the Advanced Energy Technologies (AET) Directorate. The successful candidate will study chemical upgrading of heavy oils
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Argonne National Laboratory’s Accelerator Science Division is seeking a Postdoctoral Appointee to contribute to the development of a Sub- THz Collinear Structural Wakefield Accelerator
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The position is part of a new collaboration between Argonne National Laboratory, the University of Notre Dame, and UIUC, supported by the Quantum Information Science Enabled Discovery 2.0 (QuantISED
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computational scientists to advance a next-generation, user-friendly, agentic AI platform for automated data analysis, interpretation, and user interactions. The appointment is expected to last two years and the
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scale up (0.5 to 400 L) arrested methanogenesis systems to convert diverse low-value organic waste streams into value-added products (e.g., carboxylic acids), and support the development and scale-up
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This is an opportunity for a knowledgeable and creative individual to be part of a team developing advanced humanoid and dexterous robotic capabilities for scientific use-cases. Recent progress has
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models for high-temperature structural materials with applications in nuclear reactors and other energy systems. The candidate will collaborate with ANL staff to review, validate, and enhance methods
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The Materials Science Division (MSD) at Argonne National Laboratory is seeking a postdoctoral appointee to join the Nanoscale Magnetic and Electronic Heterostructures group. This position will focus
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of radiofrequency (MHz–GHz) nanoscale phenomena in systems relevant to microelectronics and quantum information science. Opportunities also exist for cross-platform studies integrating ultrafast TEM with ultrafast x