Chemical | Scholarship for Nigerians and Africans - Part 11

PhD Researcher in Palaeoecology, Utrecht University, Netherlands

The PhD student will be employed within the project “Plants in a low CO2 world: proxy development for the Pleistocene plant record and reconstructed feedbacks on the carbon cycle”. The project will provide important constraints on the impact of glacial low CO2 conditions on plant growth and development. Furthermore, results will allow for determining the consequences for the terrestrial carbon cycle.
Low CO2 levels prevailed during most of the Pleistocene. For most modern plants a minimum concentration of about 160 ppmv atm. CO2 represents the limit of natural growth conditions. It has been suggested that CO2 starvation has had a direct effect on plants, limiting growth and water use efficiency. Low CO2 and associated water stress may have caused extinctions of plant species during the Pleistocene. However, little is known about the impact of these extreme environmental conditions. The main aims of the present project are to perform growth experiments at a series of (sub)ambient CO2, in order to validate botanical (pollen and seed productivity, stomatal frequency) and organic geochemical proxies (stable isotopes). Moreover we will study glacial plant macro and pollen records. The combination will allow us a better understanding of the impact of low CO2 on plants during the Pleistocene.
The project is a collaborative project of the Department of Biology at Utrecht University and the Faculty of Earth and Life Sciences at the VU University Amsterdam. The project is sponsored by the Darwin Center for Biogeology. The place of work is Utrecht, The Netherlands.

Qualifications:

We seek a highly motivated candidate with excellent communication skills and qualifications (MSc or equivalent) in the fields of environmental biology, plant ecology/-ecophysiology or palaeoecology. Experience in laboratory techniques necessary to work with plants in growth chambers would be an advantage. Candidates are expected to communicate easily in English, both verbally and in writing.

Additional information about the vacancy can be obtained from: Dr Wolfram Kuerschner, email: w.m.kuerschner@uu.nl, tel. (+31) 30 253 2630, and from the websites of the Darwin Center and the Palaeoecology group.

How to apply:

Please send your application (including a letter of motivation, curriculum vitae and contact details of at least two references) before September 15th 2010 to email: Science.PenO@uu.nl. Please mention vacancy number 66007.

PhD Position in Microbial Ecology and Biogeochemistry, University of Southern Denmark

We wish to fill one PhD mobility fellowships at the Institute of Biology, University of Southern Denmark, with the following description:
Activity study of microorganisms in marine environments using molecular ecology tools in combination with biogeochemical analysis.
Research will be on microorganisms living in marine water and sediments and it includes several field trips to marine environments around the world. We focus on microorganisms within the sulphur and methane cycle and combine microbial activity and molecular ecology with biogeochemistry and stable isotope analysis. The successful applicant should have interest in one or several of these areas and like to do both laboratory and field studies.
As this is a mobility fellowship, the student’s present degree must have been awarded from a university other than the University of Southern Denmark.

Contact Person: Kirsten Habicht,
Email: khabicht@biology.sdu.dk.

Contact Address:
Kirsten Habicht,
Department of Biology,
University of Southern Denmark,
Campusvej 55, 5230 Odense M
Denmark

Closing date: 10 September, 2010 at 12 noon.

PhD Studentship, Neutron Reflectometry and Ellipsometry applied to ATmospheric Night-time Oxidation (NEATNOx), University of Reading, UK

This project aims to obtain new insights into characteristics of film-covered cloud droplets by combining neutron reflector and ellipsometry for the study of atmospheric
reactions. Concerted experiments with these two complementary techniques will allow
investigation of the kinetic behaviour of organic monolayers at the air–liquid interface.
Organic monolayers on a Langmuir trough act as model for naturally occurring organic
layers on cloud droplets, and gas-phase destruction of the monolayers is monitored in real
time. Central to the project objectives is the optimization of the ILL’s new horizontal
neutron reflectometer, FIGARO, to push its temporal resolution to new limits. The
development of a dedicated cell for ellipsometry measurements will allow essential characterization of the chemical systems.

The work forms part of a wider research programme into modern climate change. Reactions
of model surfactants with the atmospheric night-time oxidant NO3 as well as with the
nitrogen oxides NO2 and N2O5 will be investigated. Saturated and unsaturated fatty acids as
well as surfactants with various degrees of deuteration will be studied to gain insight into
the reaction mechanisms at sub-molecular resolution. The experimental data obtained will
be fed into newly developed models to (i) directly quantify the importance of surface
reactions on atmospheric aerosol; (ii) de-convolute the relative importance of surface
reaction, bulk reaction and transport; (iii) provide mechanistic insight with sub-molecular
resolution; and (iv) gain key information on the surfactant properties of reaction products.

The student will be based at ILL in Grenoble for the duration of the PhD and will have visits
to the University of Reading where the degree will be awarded. This position represents an
excellent opportunity for the student to be involved in additional collaborations and
participate in international meetings as well as cross-disciplinary research projects.
The annual allowance is currently €28,800 (subject to social security contributions and
income tax) plus the ILL productivity bonus (€910 in 2009), tuition fees are not payable. A
stipend will be paid at a similar level for 3 years from commencement of study, subject to
transfer to PhD after the first year.

The studentship starting date should be between October 2010 and February 2011. The
studentship is open to UK and EU nationals. Non-EU nationals are welcome to apply if the
have funding for the difference between EU and international fees.

Closing date for applications: 10th September 2010.