Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Country
-
Field
-
tensile strength, so engineers have to rely on steel reinforcement. This project explores a different approach: nature has already perfected the art of turning brittle minerals into tough materials, like
-
frameworks and nuclear reaction codes (e.g., TALYS, EMPIRE, Oslo Method software) and interpret results within the broader context of nuclear structure and reaction theory. 2. Experimental Research & Data
-
are associated with a number of different critical mineral-bearing mineral systems (e.g. iron oxide apatite (IOA)-iron oxide copper gold (IOCG), porphyry Cu-Mo-Au, Carlin-type Sb-Au, epithermal Au-Ag, carbonate
-
-throughput and AI-driven antifungal discovery fungal symbiosis an& pathogenicity fungal metabolites, epigenetics & microbiome structuring computational microbiomics & systems biology of fungal infections
-
, bioinformatician, physicist, or interdisciplinary researcher with a strong affinity for developing methods at the interface of computation, physics, and structural biology. The ideal candidate has a genuine interest
-
of organisms and communities? Then join the ERC Advanced Grant project ’The Power of Size’ to find out, make a difference and boost your academic career! The overall aim of ’The Power of Size’ is to establish
-
porosity and improving material strength. For these reasons, MICP has emerged as a viable and scalable biotechnology for soil and structural material (e.g., concrete, granite) reinforcement, as
-
on simulating nanoalloy structures to create a database for materials characterization. The main tasks include running molecular dynamics and Monte Carlo simulations to model nanoalloys under various
-
wide and ultra-wide bandgap semiconductor materials and devices, including GaN and Gallium Oxide. You will have the opportunity to work with unique device structures including graded channel and multi
-
disorder (ASD), structural and anatomical brain differences associated with ASD, gender differences in ASD, and social, language, and cognitive development in infants and young children. The fellowship