Get free PhD updates, every week | SIGN UP NOW Get free PhD updates, every week | SIGN UP NOW

We have 11 Applied Chemistry PhD Projects, Programmes & Scholarships PhD Projects, Programmes & Scholarships in London

Discipline

Discipline

Chemistry

Location

Location

London  United Kingdom

Institution

Institution

All Institutions

PhD Type

PhD Type

All PhD Types

Funding

Funding

All Funding


Applied Chemistry PhD Projects, Programmes & Scholarships PhD Projects, Programmes & Scholarships in London

We have 11 Applied Chemistry PhD Projects, Programmes & Scholarships PhD Projects, Programmes & Scholarships in London

A PhD in Applied Chemistry is an opportunity for you to expand your knowledge of chemical processes and products and apply that to real-world problems. Depending on your research area, you could be looking at the application of chemistry in various fields such as environmental monitoring, forensics or healthcare.

What's it like to study a PhD in Applied Chemistry?

Whilst you're completing a PhD in Applied Chemistry you'll acquire a deep understanding of the properties of chemical species and how they react in different environments. You'll work with your supervisors and other members of the department to complete a unique research project that will have a significant impact on the field.

Possible research topics include:

  • Biological and chemical forensics
  • Chemical and biological risk assessment
  • Energy storage and recovery
  • Environmental health
  • Nanotechnology
  • Forensic analysis

Your research will be divided into defined stages called milestones that will need to be achieved before you can submit your final thesis. These milestones will be agreed upon at the start of your PhD and will form part of your research agreement.

Some PhD programmes in Applied Chemistry have pre-defined research plans, but many will accept applicants proposing their own research projects.

Most PhD programmes in Applied Chemistry will be split between your own independent research and supporting lab work.

In some cases, an Applied Chemistry PhD may involve some taught modules provided by the university. This may be the case if your research project has an attached taught module that you'll need to complete in order to graduate. However, the main focus of your study will be independent research.

You'll likely be asked to submit an academic thesis of about 80,000 words at the end of your PhD.

Entry requirements for a PhD in Applied Chemistry

In order to be considered for a PhD in Applied Chemistry, you'll need to usually have an upper second-class Bachelors degree in a relevant subject or a Masters with at least a merit rating in Chemistry or a related subject. You may occasionally be considered for a PhD if you have a lower classification with significant relevant research experience or a Masters with Merit if you also have significant research experience.

You may also be asked to show that you have the necessary language skills to complete your PhD if your native language is not English.

PhD in Applied Chemistry funding options

The main body funding PhDs in Applied Chemistry in the UK is the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC). They provide fully funded studentships along with a monthly stipend to students doing a PhD in Applied Chemistry.

You can also apply for a self-funded PhD which means you'll need to fund your PhD through university scholarships, government loans and grants from charities and trusts.

PhD in Applied Chemistry careers

A PhD in Applied Chemistry can open up a number of career opportunities. You could go into academia and teach and research at a university or you could join the chemical industry to help develop and improve the world around us. You could also work in forensics or environmental health.

read more
PhD saved successfully

London-Singapore : Nanotechnology strategies for the assembly of 2D nanohybrid materials into static and stimuli-responsive devices

This is a 3.5-year programme with years 1 and 4 at QMUL and years 2 and 3 in Singapore at the A*STAR research institute. Only applicants eligible for home fees or applicants who hold indefinite leave to remain will be considered for this project. Read more
Last chance to apply

Volumetric Optical Stimulation for In vitro Tissue Remodelling

Manufacturing a functional human organ requires the ability to produce highly complex 3D multi-vascular networks with high spatial resolution for transport, as well as the ability to incorporate spatial patterning of a multitude of matrix compositions and cell types within the entire volume of the printed scaffold to deliver localized tissue-specific physiological function. Read more
Last chance to apply

Volumetric Bioprinting of 3D Microvascular Networks

Manufacturing a functional human organ requires the ability to produce highly complex 3D multi-vascular networks with high spatial resolution for transport, as well as the ability to incorporate spatial patterning of a multitude of matrix compositions and cell types within the entire volume of the printed scaffold to deliver localized tissue-specific physiological function. Read more
Last chance to apply

Development of a simple, cheap, reliable device with shape variant nanoparticles for infectious disease diagnosis

Infectious diseases are major public-health problem all over the world. This project aims to incorporate chemical synthesis, characterization and biofunctionalization of shape variant nanoparticles in a microfluidic device fabrication for plasmonic nanosensors for the detection of pathogens. Read more

Sustainable artwork preservation: understanding and controlling environmentally induced changes to paintings

Applications are invited for a 3.5-year funded PhD studentship based in the Department of Engineering, King’s College London led by Professor Barbara Shollock with Professor Aviva Burnstock, from the Conservation Department at The Courtauld. Read more
  • 1

Filtering Results