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the Department is searching for a postdoctoral researcher with training and experience in structural biology (X-ray crystallography) and ideally natural product biosynthesis. A postdoctoral position is available
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Your profile We are looking for a candidate with a doctoral degree in a field related to structural biology, pharmaceutical biology, (bio)chemistry or microbiology. Experience in structural biology
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methods and systems to overcome the limitations of today’s materials processing technologies. One particular area of interest is the design and fabrication of active structures through hybrid production
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energy-related applications. Our research portfolio spans fundamental materials chemistry, process–structure–property relationships, and application-driven R&D, in close collaboration with academic and
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/molecular biology techniques (e.g., qPCR, RT-PCR, Western blot, ELISA) High level of responsibility, reliability, and attention to detail Independent, structured, and solution-oriented working style Team
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and processes for energy efficient separation: Development of novel structuring approaches Manufacturing and characterization of monoliths Geometry and process optimization Both positions will be
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, consistent, and correct-by-construction (or corrected via proof/counterexample feedback). You will lead research and prototyping of neuro-symbolic methods that translate heterogeneous requirements (text
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for structural analysis of metabolites and lipids, creating metabolomics knowledge graphs, and inferring fluxes from MS data. The group collaborates with mass spectrometry vendors and technology partners
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vibrations), and structural (migration of atoms) effects with an atomistic resolution. This can be achieved by self-consistently coupling molecular dynamics (MD), density-functional theory (DFT), and quantum
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. Scientific Background Stem cells are rare populations of cells that (in their primordial, i.e., ontological significance) serve as clonal founders of embryonic or adult somatic structures, while retaining a