Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
PhD in Electrical Engineering: Advanced Electric Drives Award Summary 100% fees covered, and a minimum tax-free annual living allowance of £20,835 (2025/26 UKRI rate). Home Only Students. Overview
-
drives, advanced control techniques for next-generation drives, and innovative approaches to reducing passive components in electric drive systems. Your research will contribute to cutting-edge technology
-
Criteria The award is available to UK and international applicants. You should have, or expect to achieve, at least a 2:1 Honours degree, or international equivalent, in Electrical Engineering or closely
-
threat to agriculture, biodiversity, and biosecurity worldwide. Current diagnostic methods for quarantine pests often rely on complex, multi-step laboratory tests that are difficult to deploy in the field
-
focused on advancing plant health diagnostics through synthetic biology. Plant pests and pathogens pose a major threat to agriculture, biodiversity, and biosecurity worldwide. Current diagnostic methods
-
that connect floating wind turbines to the seabed remain one of the challenging issues in the engineering analysis and design of floating wind applications. Over time, these subsea cables become coated with soft
-
chlorination to convert metallic impurities into volatile chlorides. The process efficiency, however, depends on a complex interplay of particle-scale interactions and particle/solid body interactions. Current
-
). Additional project costs will also be provided. Overview We are looking for a highly motivated candidate with a background in electronic engineering, physics or a related discipline. Strong practical skills
-
emergence of large-scale quantum computing poses a significant threat to current public-key cryptographic schemes (e.g., RSA and ECC), creating an urgent need for quantum-safe security solutions. This PhD
-
support massive Internet-of-Things (IoT) deployments through technologies such as network slicing. At the same time, the emergence of large-scale quantum computing poses a significant threat to current