Salary range: £33,309 – £40,927
FTE: 1 (35 hours/week)
Term: Fixed term (44 months)
Closing date: 22 May 2022
The Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering seeks
to recruit a talented researcher to a 44 month Research Associate position to work
on nature-based solutions to mitigate landslides. This position is funded by
the UKRI Future Leaders Fellowship project: ‘Soil-mycelia systems for slope
stabilisation’ led by Dr Grainne El Mountassir.
The aim of the project is to develop novel low-cost, low-carbon
fungal-based biogeotechnologies for landslide mitigation. The project will focus
on characterising the hydraulic and mechanical behaviour of fungal treated
soils over time and in response to varying environmental conditions (e.g.
temperature and wetting-drying cycles). Experiments will be conducted at bench
scale (cms) and at large-scale (several metres) in the laboratory. Experimental
data gathered will be used to inform numerical models to investigate the
influence of fungal treatment on slope stability for real case studies.
The successful researcher will be based in the Department of
Civil and Environmental Engineering at the University of Strathclyde in
Glasgow, UK and will have the opportunity to undertake an industrial secondment
with BAM Ritchies. The Department has over £4.5 million of current research
projects in ground and subsurface engineering and the researcher will join an enthusiastic
and friendly team of postgraduate and postdoctoral researchers that research a
range of bio- and bio-chemical ground improvement and grouting technologies.
The University is seeking an excellent and enthusiastic
candidate that can contribute to laboratory-based research on the hydraulic and
mechanical testing of soils (e.g. oedometer, shear box, triaxial, permeability,
water retention behaviour, suction control/monitoring methods) and investigation
of soil microstructure (e.g. Scanning Electron Microscope, X-ray
microtomography, Optical microscopy). The project will also work towards
developing a constitutive model for the hydro-mechanical behaviour of fungal
treated soils and numerical modelling will be conducted to assess the influence
of fungal treatment on slope stability. It is not necessary that you have
expertise in all of these areas as training will be given, but you should have
experience in at least some of these areas. To be considered for the role, you
should have a relevant undergraduate degree (e.g. Civil Engineering) and have
successfully completed a PhD in a relevant field (e.g. geotechnical
engineering, ecological engineering). You should be creative, with the
ability to apply initiative and problem solve and have excellent communication
skills.
Informal enquiries about the post
can be directed to Dr Grainne El
Mountassir, Senior Lecturer in Geotechnical Engineering, (grainne.elmountassir@strath.ac.uk).
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