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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
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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
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: Small and repetitive structures with spacings on the nanometre scale can refract and reflect light to create vibrant “structural” colours, which are being explored to produce anti-counterfeit markings
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mechanical and chemical properties; fully 3D-printed electronics; and devices with mechanical or electrical responses encoded into their structure. However, we don’t yet know how to design these complex
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About the Project Main description: Fiber-polymer composites are innovative ad sustainable alternative in construction due to their lightweight, excellent fatigue and durability, which are widely
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) structures. The functional importance of this complexity is under explored. Our recent work indicates that different RNA isoforms adopt multiple distinct and functionally relevant structural conformations
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exhibit complex two-dimensional structures whose performance is governed by subtle variations in layer stacking and nanoscale disorder—features that are difficult to resolve with currently available
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; EPSRC Centre for Doctoral Training in Green Industrial Futures | Bath, England | United Kingdom | about 2 months ago
for industry placements, site visits, international facility visits and biannual residentials. The Project Are you passionate about sustainable innovation and eager to tackle one of the construction industry’s
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project will examine tritium permeation through various structural materials and potential anti-permeation coatings. Based in the School of Metallurgy and Materials at the University of Birmingham
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(£19,237 for 2024/25). The proposed project addresses significant health and safety concerns in the UK construction sector, where workers are more prone to suffer with emotional stress, mental tiredness, and