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additive manufactured filters as counter-measures to the formation of oxide stringers in the liquid metal. The PhD candidate, who will study at the University of Birmingham and the University and Rolls
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growing University of Birmingham. Please visit our group website for more details about our research: http://davidscanlon.com/ Applications must be made through the university’s on-line application system
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should be implemented via FE simulation code User Functions by the PhD candidate. The PhD project, based at Rolls-Royce and the University of Birmingham's joint High Temperature Research Centre (HTRC) will
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of plastic deformation across different planar orientations based upon the fundamental crystallographic structure of Ni-base superalloy. Thus, this PhD, based at the University of Birmingham, will aim
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at the University of Birmingham, intends to investigate localised strain banding effects as they occur within several commercially applied SX superalloys, through numerous experimental techniques such as scanning and
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, the candidate should have at least a strong upper second-class (2.1) degree in Chemical Engineering/Computer Science/Maths. Applications comprising a detailed CV, cover letter, the names and addresses of two
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the design and operation of such systems particularly challenging. This collaborative project between the University of Birmingham and McGill University (Montreal, Canada) aims at better understanding bubble
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The production of vast amounts of nuclear fusion energy in tokamak and compact spherical reactor designs, as a replica of nuclear reactions in the sun, rely on the deuterium (D)-tritium (T) reaction and the hot D-T plasma confinement using intense superconducting magnets. Tritium is an unstable...
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will be based at the University of Birmingham, where the successful candidate will work with people within the Schools of both Physics and Engineering. The successful applicant will be embedded in
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PhD Studentship: Data-driven Probabilistic Modelling of Clonal Dynamics in Human Tissues and Cancers
. The project is therefore suitable for students with a background in (but not limited to): • Applied Mathematics or Theoretical Physics • Computational Biology or Bioinformatics • Computer Science or Engineering