Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Category
-
Program
-
Field
-
dynamics of energy materials on the atomic and mesoscopic scale using neutron methods, complementary X-ray experiments and support of further techniques including computer simulations Synthesis and
-
, programming, electronic lab journals, machine learning Intrinsic motivation to show initiative, creativity, and to work independently Excellent cooperation and communication skills and ability to work as part
-
data for system monitoring and control. We are currently seeking a PhD student for the following research topics: Data analysis considering uncertainties and related metrologial aspects Development
-
, the European energy system is considering a shift from an energy system based on fossil fuels that relies on large power plants, to a dynamic, supply- and demand-driven approach, often organized in local energy
-
science electron microscopy at the Forschungszentrum Jülich. Cryo-EM has become a very powerful method to visualize ice-embedded samples including purified proteins at close to atomic resolution. Single
-
electron microscopy is considered an advantage Knowledge of spent nuclear fuel systems, actinide and radiochemistry is desirable The ability to work in an international multidisciplinary team, and to work
-
energy transition. We use many different nanoparticles to fabricate highly active supported catalysts. This PhD thesis specifically focuses on automating the synthesis route of e.g. platinum based and
-
of Jülich`s supercomputers using solvers specialized on decomposed optimization Quantifying the speed-up compared to state-of-the-art commercial solvers for desktop PCs Using the new computer power to
-
for energy systems. Your work should first focus on the translation of basic power system algorithms to quantum computing (QC). As a result of this phase, use cases should be defined to highlight the value
-
experiments on the Jülich D-Wave quantum annealer and on a gate-based quantum computer over the cloud. We are supported by our project partners and quantum computing experts at the Jülich Supercomputing Centre