Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Country
-
Employer
- The University of Manchester
- University of Birmingham
- CNRS
- Monash University
- Lulea University of Technology
- Max Planck Institute for Sustainable Materials GmbH, Düsseldorf
- Max Planck Institute for Sustainable Materials •
- Ruhr-Universität Bochum •
- Tallinn University of Technology
- Technical University of Munich
- University of Nottingham
- University of Warwick
- 2 more »
- « less
-
Field
-
Job Offer from April 09, 2026 The International Max Planck Research School for Sustainable Metallurgy (IMPRS SusMet) offers PhD positions for three years for the following projects: Project 1
-
metallurgy to produce high‑performance materials through Spark Plasma Sintering (SPS). This process is based on the simultaneous application of high pressure and an electric current through a graphite die
-
A 3.5 year UK PhD is available in the group of Prof Sandy Knowles within the School of Metallurgy and Materials at the University of Birmingham, with a tax-free stipend of £20,780 per year. This
-
additive manufacturing methods and rapid characterization of both structure and mechanical properties. Key compositions will then be selected and produced using classical metallurgy techniques, enabling a
-
Geijer Mining District in Northern Sweden. This project will be conducted in close collaboration with LKAB and the Centre of Advanced Mining and Metallurgy (CAMM-SFO) at LTU. This project gives
-
the School of Metallurgy and Materials, and characterisation of extracted materials through e.g., XRD, XRF, IR/Raman. The project will provide opportunities for collaboration with leading industrial and
-
the Henry Royce Institute, and benefit from the vibrant and friendly Metallurgy & Corrosion research community at Manchester. Besides subject-specific training, there will be many opportunities
-
skills and project/time management. You will also gain in-depth knowledge about physical metallurgy of steels, radiation effects and experimental mechanics focusing on a material critical for fusion
-
contact Dr. Mike Jenkins (m.j.jenkins@bham.ac.uk), or Dr. Matt Keith (m.j.keith@bham.ac.uk ). If you are ready to apply, then please click the ‘Apply’ button above, and select “PhD Department of Metallurgy
-
. Metallurgy has provided humankind with materials, tools and the associated progress for more than five millennia. It is not only a huge engineering success story but has also become the biggest single