PhD Studentship in Accelerating High Temperature Qualification of Fusion Materials

Updated: about 2 months ago
Location: Oxford, ENGLAND
Job Type: FullTime
Deadline: 19 Apr 2024

Research Studentship: Accelerating High Temperature Qualification of Fusion Materials

3.5-year D.Phil. studentship 

Project: Materials Testing 2.0 for Accelerating High Temperature Qualification of Fusion Materials

Supervisor: Prof Clive Siviour (University of Oxford), Dr Rory Spencer (UKAEA), Professor Fabrice Pierron (MatchID)
A key challenge in materials qualification for fusion is the requirement to test materials across a range of temperatures. For high temperature components a primary failure mode is creep. Current design codes require materials to be tested from room temperature to the maximum operating temperature in steps of 50 °C at a range of stresses, leading to large test programmes that also have to cover a range of neutron irradiation damage levels. This is compounded by the limited availability and expense of testing irradiated material. Therefore, it is desirable to develop test methods that can provide significantly more data with limited amounts of material.

The emergence of full-field camera-based methods for measuring deformation coupled with inverse identification has enabled a new testing paradigm: ‘Materials Testing 2.0’ (MT2.0) [1,2]. The use of heterogenous stress and temperature states means that data from a large range of the fusion operational envelope can be obtained from a single test. However, new methods must be developed that can be used to design optimal test configurations for fusion design rules.

This project will develop new methods for high temperature qualification of fusion materials with a focus on creep. The first objective will be to develop topology optimization procedures for optimizing MT2.0 test configurations. The second, to perform uncertainty quantification of the resulting material data with a focus on the stability of the camera-based deformation measurements at high temperatures for long period of time. The main outcome of this work will be a framework for designing targeted MT2.0 tests for fusion design rules that focus on the fusion operational envelope.

[1] F. Pierron, M. Grédiac, Towards Material Testing 2.0. A review of test design for identification of constitutive parameters from full-field measurements, Strain. 57 (2021) e12370. https://doi.org/10.1111/str.12370.

[2]     F. Pierron, Material Testing 2.0: A brief review, Strain. (2023) e12434. https://doi.org/10.1111/str.12434.

Eligibility

This studentship is fully funded at the Home level (fees plus stipend) by UKAEA and Pembroke College, Oxford. 

Award Value

Course fees are covered at the level set for UK students (c. £9,500 p.a.). The stipend (tax-free maintenance grant) is c. £20,000 p.a. for the first year, and at least this amount for a further two and a half years. 

Candidate Requirements

Prospective candidates will be judged according to how well they meet the following criteria:

  • A first-class honours degree (or equivalent) in Physics, Engineering, or Materials Science
  • Excellent written and spoken communication skills in English

The following skills are also highly desirable:

  • Ability to program in Matlab, Python, or similar
  • Experience of Finite Element modelling
  • Excellent understanding of Solid Mechanics and Materials Engineering
  • Strong laboratory-based skills

Applicants with a good 2.1 degree are encouraged to apply if they can demonstrate excellent laboratory skills.

Application Procedure

Candidates must submit a graduate application form and are expected to meet the graduate admissions criteria on the course page of the University website .

Before applying, applicants are strongly encouraged to make informal enquiries to Prof Clive Siviour ([email protected]).

Please quote 24ENGMM_CS3 in all correspondence and in your graduate application.

Application deadline:  19 April 2024 

Start date: October 2024



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