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The Applied Materials Division at Argonne National Laboratory has an immediate opening for a Postdoctoral Appointee. The candidate will be responsible for reviewing and developing design methods and
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manipulation with computer-aided design software. Experience in carrying out research tasks with industry partners. Experience in interdisciplinary collaborative research. Knowledge of multi-dimensional code
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catalysis. The project will involve designing, synthesizing, and characterizing new metal-ligand complexes, supporting these complexes on metal oxide and/or non-traditional support materials, and evaluating
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techniques for studying high-temperature kinetics, and chemical kinetic simulations Considerable experience in laser, optical systems and mass spectrometry Good experience in the design of experimental systems
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. Major responsibilities include: Collaborating with an industry partner and other scientists at Argonne to design, fabricate, characterize, and optimize additively manufactured X-ray optics. Leading
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for completing complex tasks, such as designing, parameterizing, and assessing simulations. The candidate will be expected to research and develop novel approaches for LLM-based agentic code generation and
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are critical tools for the design and analysis of interfacial materials and will play a vital role in this research. In this role, the postdoctoral fellow is expected to work with domain experts and experimental
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optimization with computer-aided design software. Knowledge of machine learning (using TensorFlow, PyTorch, etc.) for multi-fidelity modeling, regression tasks, management and analysis of large datasets, and
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innovation. In support of this commitment, Argonne encourages minorities, women, veterans and individuals with disabilities to apply for employment. Argonne considers all qualified applicants for employment
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National Laboratory is committed to a diverse and inclusive workplace that fosters collaborative scientific discovery and innovation. In support of this commitment, Argonne encourages minorities, women