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University of Amsterdam PhD Fellowship in Experimental Physics 2017, Netherlands

Publish Date: Feb 07, 2017

Deadline: Feb 17, 2017

PhD candidate in Experimental Physics

The Institute of Physics (IoP) of the Faculty of Science combines the Van der Waals-Zeeman Institute (WZI), the Institute of Theoretical Physics (ITFA) and the Institute for High Energy Physics (IHEF) and is one of the large research institutes of the faculty of Science at the University of Amsterdam. A PhD position is available in the Soft Matter Group of the WZI at the University of Amsterdam.

Goal

The aim of this PhD project is to investigate the assembly and mechanics of complex colloidal structures made from patchy colloidal particles. Recent breakthroughs in synthesis allow the design of anisotropic colloidal particles that serve as building blocks in complex micron and nanoscale structures. These structures are both of fundamental scientific interest as well as important for applications in future smart materials. This project explores the physics of their assembly, and the resulting mechanical properties. It will provide fundamental insight into complex self-assembly processes and mechanical response at the micron- and nanoscale for tomorrow’s materials, and elucidate principles that also underlie complex biological structures.

Description

New micron and nano particles have the potential to act as building blocks in hierarchical structures of tomorrow’s materials: the ability to design these particles with exquisite precision over their shape and surface properties promise the creation of new micron and nano-scale structures with exceptional optical and mechanical properties. While recent breakthroughs allow making these particles routinely, the assembly of these particles into functional structures remains a grand challenge: it requires fundamental understanding of colloidal assembly, and the statistical mechanics of equilibrium and non-equilibrium structure formation.

In this project we will use patchy colloidal particles of well-defined geometry to investigate the assembly and mechanics of complex superstructures. The particles interact via hydrophobic/hydrophilic patches that can be made with exquisite precision over the patch geometry, width and wetting properties. Using novel critical Casimir forces in binary solvents, we can control the assembly of these building blocks into complex superstructures and study the physics of assembly and resulting structural and mechanical properties in three dimensions with confocal microscopy.

We will systematically investigate the assembly of structures from di-patch, tri-patch, and higher-order particles and investigate the role of local coordination in the mechanical response. In collaboration with the theory and simulation groups in Amsterdam, we will then elucidate the underlying physical principles to understand the relationship between structure and mechanics, as well as search for universal mechanical properties and universality classes. The combination of direct observation and modelling will yield fundamental insight into principles of structure formation and mechanical response that also underlie molecular and biological structures. Furthermore, this work should elucidate new “design rules” to create complex mechanical metamaterials at the nanoscale. The work will be embedded in the lively environment of the Amsterdam Soft Matter group, as well as the local Soft Matter cluster, a focus point of the faculty, with contributing experimental, simulation and theory groups.

The successful candidate will work in an inspiring cross-disciplinary environment with diverse expertise in colloidal synthesis and assembly, rheology and nanomechanics (Soft condensed matter group), as well as take part in national and international collaborations.

Requirements

  • Master in Physics or Physical Chemistry;

  • experience in the following fields: colloidal/nanoparticle assembly, Soft Matter, Statistical Mechanics;

  • good communication skills (English).

Further information

For more information, please contact Prof. Peter Schall

Appointment

The appointment will be on a temporary basis for a period of 4 years (initial appointment will be for a period of 18 months and after satisfactory evaluation it can be extended for a total duration of 4 years) and should lead to a dissertation (PhD thesis). An educational plan will be drafted that includes attendance of courses and (international) meetings. The PhD candidate is also expected to assist in teaching of undergraduates.

Based on a full-time appointment (38 hours per week) the gross monthly salary will range from €2,191 in the first year to €2,801 in the last year. The Collective Labour Agreement for Dutch Universities is applicable.

Application

Applications should be emailed to application-science@uva.nl, with the position you are applying for and vacancy number 16-607 in the subject line. Please make sure all your material is attached in only one pdf. All applications should include a curriculum vitae, a list of university courses taken with grades, and a single page maximum statement of motivation and research interests.

For more information please click "Further Official Information" below.


This opportunity has expired. It was originally published here:

http://www.uva.nl/en/research/phd/phd-vacancies/item/16-607-phd-candidate-in-experimental-physics.html?page=1&pageSize=50

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Disciplines

Physics

Study Levels

PhD

Opportunity Types

Fellowships

Eligible Countries

International

Host Countries

Netherlands