Looking to list your PhD opportunities? Log in here.
About the Project
3-year PhD studentship, Faculty of Engineering, University of Nottingham
Applications are invited for a fully funded PhD studentship (3 years) within the Faculty of Engineering at the University of Nottingham, in collaboration with Johnson Matthey. The student will work with an interdisciplinary supervisory team with expertise in 3D printing, materials chemistry and biocatalysis.
Project title: Bioelectronic interfaces that exploit the unique optoelectronic properties of printed 2D multilayer devices
Supervisory Team:
Engineering: Lyudmila Turyanska, Richard Hague
Pharmacy: Frankie Rawson, Veeran Chauhan
Physics: Mark Fromhold
The project will develop new bioelectronic interfaces that exploit unique properties of 3D printed multi-material devices. This will include van der Waals heterostructures comprising multiple layers of 2D materials including graphene and hexagonal boron nitride. The primary focus will be to design, fabricate, measure and optimize multi-material devices with three distinct sensing and imaging modalities, which can be utilized either independently or combined by fabricating hybrid devices with multiple functional layers for Electrical impedance tomography, Capacitive sensing and Electromagnetic detection.
The architecture of these devices will be developed for specific applications from the detection and analysis of gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) in biological systems, with an aim to translate this research to whole organism imaging using Caenorhabditis elegans. C. elegans, a free-living soil nematode, is the most completely understood animal on the planet in terms of genetics, neurology, and cell survival. Its application as a model to study complex biochemical process has gathered significant momentum due to its ease of culture (feeds on bacterial lawns on agar plates), short life-cycle (egg to adult in 3 days), optical transparency (permitting optical visualization of anatomical events) and freely available mutants (that could function as experimental controls). The aim of the project will be to determine 3D positioning of AuNPs in the nematode anatomy, monitor AuNP nanowire growth in situ as well as determine the impact of electromagnetic control on C. elegans muscle contractions due to AuNP nanowire growth.
The student will work as part of multidisciplinary team crossing the boundaries between the Centre for Additive Manufacturing (Engineering), Pharmacy and Physics. The student will benefit from training in topical research areas ranging from additive manufacturing of functional devices incorporating low dimensional materials to development of novel electropeutic strategies.
Eligibility
• Due to funding restrictions, the position is only available for home/UK candidates
• Candidates should have, or expect to obtain, a 1st -class or 2:1 degree in Engineering, Pharmacy, Physics, Chemistry or related discipline
How to apply
Please send a copy of your covering letter, CV and academic transcripts to cfam@nottingham.ac.uk referring to the project title.
Closing date: applications will be evaluated on a rolling basis until a suitable candidate is appointed.
How good is research at University of Nottingham in Engineering?
Research output data provided by the Research Excellence Framework (REF)
Click here to see the results for all UK universitiesEmail Now
Why not add a message here
The information you submit to University of Nottingham will only be used by them or their data partners to deal with your enquiry, according to their privacy notice. For more information on how we use and store your data, please read our privacy statement.

Search suggestions
Based on your current searches we recommend the following search filters.
Check out our other PhDs in Nottingham, United Kingdom
Check out our other PhDs in United Kingdom
Start a New search with our database of over 4,000 PhDs

PhD suggestions
Based on your current search criteria we thought you might be interested in these.
Topological design and optimisation with 3D-printed microwave devices
University of Birmingham
Development of novel III-V semiconductors for optoelectronic devices
Cardiff University
Desinging new sucrose replacers for bakery products that mimic physical and sensory properties
University of Reading