Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
and simulation of the electronic structure of polycrystalline and defective two-dimensional materials. Interviews will begin immediately and continue until the position is filled. This position centers
-
needs. As a part of this team, you will : Develop, build and test equipment and perform molten salt separations which support the development of a secure fuel supply for MSRs and nuclear fuel cycle
-
model classifiers (PLS-DA, random forest, neural network, etc) towards unraveling materials structure-function relationships, and are familiar with optimization approaches such as genetic search, Bayesian
-
The Center for Nanoscale Materials (CNM) at Argonne National Laboratory seeks a highly motivated postdoctoral researcher with deep expertise in electrochemistry. The successful candidate will lead
-
: - Comprehensive understanding of applied computational materials science, including electronic structure methods and molecular dynamics. - Experience with High-Performance Computing (HPC) systems and intelligent
-
Qualifications: Background in fracture mechanics-based reliability modeling. Familiarity with the basic structure-property relations for metallic and ceramic materials. Experience in engineering design
-
This position will be dedicated to research projects aiming to unravel the fundamental interfacial processes in membrane and ionomer materials employed in energy conversion systems such as critical
-
, both focused on multimodal synchrotron characterization of defects and interfaces in oxides and 2D materials. These positions are part of a cross-facility initiative to build an “AlphaFold
-
to/from the memory via optical fibers. The candidate will be primarily responsible for: (1) advancing our experimental program to fabricate new hybrid devices in Argonne’s Center for Nanoscale Materials
-
/ML model development to design and discover redox-active materials with tunable properties (structure, charge state, etc.) Discovery of novel materials for energy storage and conversion and their