PhD position in the area of wood fibre composites
The Materials Research Department at Risø National Laboratory for Sustainable Energy, Technical University of Denmark, is seeking a PhD student within the field of advanced fibre composites. The PhD position will aim at increasing the fundamental knowledge of wood fibres and their behaviour as reinforcements in composite materials studying e.g. wood fibre structure and mechanical and hygroscopic properties e.g. by micromechanical modelling and advanced testing.
Mechanical annealing and source-limited deformation in submicrometre-diameter Ni crystals
Dear colleagues,
The following is our most recent research work to share with you. http://www.nature.com/nmat/journal/v7/n2/abs/nmat2085.html
Mechanics of microtubule buckling in living cells
As the most rigid cytoskeletal filaments, microtubules bear compressive forces in living cells, balancing the tensile forces within the cytoskeleton to maintain the cell shape. It is often observed that, in living cells, microtubules under compression severely buckle into short wavelengths. By contrast, when compressed, isolated microtubules in vitro buckle into single long-wavelength arcs. The critical buckling force of the microtubules in vitro is two orders of magnitude lower than that of the microtubules in living cells.
Program available for 7th IC Fatigue Damage of Structural Materials
The full oral program for the 7th International Conference on Fatigue Damage of Structural Materials is now available at http://www.fatiguedamage.elsevier.com/index.htm. Join your peers by registering for this popular single-stream meeting held in Hyannis, MA, USA on beautiful Cape Cod, September 14-19, 2008.
Read About Web-based discussion forums in Science!
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Read About Web-based discussion forums in Science!
Science 29 February 2008: |
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Integrating Content Detail and Critical Reasoning by Peer Review
Symposium on Mechanics of Slender Structures (MoSS) 2008
From Prof. Weidong Zhu at
University of Maryland, Baltimore County
Postdoctoral Position at UC Davis in Computational Materials Science
Update: The position has been filled; thanks to all who responded.
A post-doctoral position is immediately available at UC Davis. The individual will work on a joint project led by myself and John Pask at LLNL on the development and application of a new finite-element based approach for large-scale quantum mechanical materials calculations.