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Department - Loughborough: Mechanical, Electrical and Manufacturing Engineering Secondary Department - Loughborough: Physics Closing date of advert: 5th July 2024 Start date: October 2024 Full-time
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) reflects this, as PROMs provide essential insights into health, quality of life, and functional status, complementing biology-based health metrics. This research aims to develop next-generation technology
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exercise, perhaps due to on-going symptoms. Neuromuscular electrical stimulation (NMES) is a well-tolerated rehabilitation technique that evokes muscular contraction, mimicking exercise, which makes it an
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You must have, or expect to gain, a minimum 2:1 Honours degree or international equivalent in a subject relevant to the proposed PhD project (e.g. chemical engineering, mechanical engineering, civil
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The burgeoning field of synthetic biology offers promising avenues for engineering artificial cells with tailored functionalities for diverse biomedical applications. This PhD project aims
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Project description: Applications are invited for a fully funded PhD studentship to study the impact of children’s auditory technology on communication in a naturalistic listening environment. The
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the in-patient setting. This project would be suitable for someone with an undergraduate degree in Electronic Engineering, Physics, Computer Science, Biomedical Engineering, or from a clinical/healthcare
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-based technique called MX-Raman. It can potentially be 10x cheaper and 10-100x faster than current tests, whilst being highly accurate at telling apart different dementias. The laser-based MX-Raman
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evaporation patterns. You will then investigate their uses in applications such as surface design, 3D printing or droplet microfluidics. It is expected that the applicant will have a good degree in Engineering
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to combine Microbial Fuel Cell (MFC) technology that produces electricity using electrons derived from biochemical reactions, with hydroponics that involves growing plants without soil. The idea is to use MFC