Fully-funded PhD in Nuclear Science and Engineering, now open for applications!

Application deadline: August 9th 2024.

Eligibility: UK students only funded in full by the UK Nuclear Decommissioning Authority:

Funding: UKRI-level, tax-free stipend (£19,237 p.a.) plus UK fees and research training support paid.

Project description:

This project addresses the requirement to detect and quantify beta-emitting activity in contaminated land and liquid effluents.  Strontium-90 and hence its daughter product yttrium-90 feature prominently as products of fission and pose significant radiological consequences due to the relatively high mobility of strontium and its similarity to calcium in terms of uptake in biological systems.  Further, whilst these nuclides have no discernible gamma-ray signature to enable stand-off characterisation directly, it is nonetheless important that their presence in-situ can be quantified because yttrium is relatively insoluble compared to strontium and hence presents a different dynamic in aqueous environments to strontium.  The aim of this project is to determine whether these nuclides can be discerned in-situ via their bremsstrahlung emissions. A good degree in Engineering, Physics or related discipline is required, comprising ideally a significant experimental component.

Subject areas: Experimental physics, nuclear physics, engineering mathematics, mathematical modelling, computational physics, environmental chemistry.

For informal enquiries, please contact: Professor Malcolm Joyce (m.joyce@lancaster.ac.uk). Candidates interested in applying should send a copy of their CV together with a personal statement/covering letter addressing their background and suitability for this project to Professor Joyce as soon as possible and by the closing date above.