20 soil-structure-interaction PhD positions at University of Nottingham in United Kingdom
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
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
-
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
-
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
-
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
-
, 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
-
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
-
the synchrotron light, to structural, chemical and electronic changes in the single metal atom at different steps in the catalytic reaction. Using the synchrotron light we can measure minute differences in
-
, 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
-
questions for research interviews. Conducting a series of semi-structured interviews at UoN. Transcription and analysis of qualitative data. Attending research team meetings. Contributing to publication
-
and a construction and testing capability up to 5MW Vision This project aims to leverage the electric propulsion hardware developed in the EU-funded €40M NEWBORN – “NExt generation high poWer fuel cells