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ReferenceENG1555Closing DateThursday, 25th August 2022DepartmentEngineering Topic: The development and use of advanced polymer chemistry designed for application in Additive Manufacturing (AM
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high transparency and additional functionality (e.g. electrical conductivity) in specific areas of the designed part. The successful PhD candidate will print novel materials using cutting edge facilities
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also afford opportunities to work across disciplinary boundaries with physics and engineering co-investigators to optimise, characterise and exploit these materials’ thermoelectric performance as part of
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bacterial colonisation of electrode surfaces. Biointerfacial characterisation using novel spectrometry approaches will be key to informing on the chemistry at the material-biology interface. Examples
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Schlumberger Cambridge Research to develop the next generation of chemical engineering smart algorithms for information integration applying state-of-the-art sensor fusion and Artificial Intelligence/machine
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the University of Nottingham (UoN). Candidates will also be expected to complete 20-30 credits of taught material, delivered by the brewing team at the UoN International Centre for Brewing Science. This position
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printing of mechanically stable structures The ideal candidate will have knowledge in 3D printing, chemistry, materials science, materials engineering or related subjects and be interested in 3D printing
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determining both the external and internal geometries of an object, as well as distinguish between different materials. However, XCT measurements are limited by difficulties in uncertainty determination, most
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having lower accuracy, material sensitivity and higher requirements for data handling and storage, are slowing their wide adoption. Combining multiple techniques to address these limitations provides
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into the ground Eligibility Applicants should have, or expect to obtain, a 1st class or 2.1 honours degree (or international equivalent) in Engineering, Materials Science, Physics or a related subject. A relevant