You cannot apply for this job anymore (deadline was 11 Apr 2021).
Browse the current job offers or choose an item in the top navigation above.
With today’s increasing reliance of people on electronic devices in many aspects of their lives, the need to preserve and consistently supply energy is ever increasing.1 For electrochemical storage devices one of the most urgent challenges is the quest for safe, sustainable, and suitable electrolytes to be used in e.g. batteries, supercapacitors and potential hybrids.2 Traditional liquid electrolytes provide the contact area and conductivity needed for good performance in commercial batteries, for example lead-acid and lithium-ion. However safety is a serious issue, as leaking of flammable organic substances creates explosion hazards and makes them unsuitable for small portable applications.3 .The development of batteries with higher energy densities, longer cycle lives and acceptable levels of safety at an affordable cost is critically needed.
For this reason, solid-state batteries have gained increasing attention as the absence of liquids eliminates leakage problems. The performance of current solid-state electrolytes is largely limited by the poor solid-solid contact between the electrolyte and the electrode, resulting in a large interfacial resistance. This is primarily due to the fact that it is inherently challenging to design solid surface with a specific surface organization. A semi-solid, or quasi-solid, electrolyte, i.e. a liquid electrolyte immobilized in a solid matrix, may offer synergies bringing new options for electrochemical devices.4 Ionic liquids (ILs) and deep eutectic solvents (DESs) would be excellent candidates as liquid electrolytes, as well as in conducting polymers or gels 5 due to their nature of being liquid salts, or a eutectic mixture with a high salt concentration omitting the need of an additional solvent.
Furthermore, the position-related requirements are:
Fixed-term contract: 1 (+3 years).
Maastricht University is renowned for its unique, innovative, problem-based learning system, which is characterized by a small-scale and student-oriented approach. Research at UM is characterized by a multidisciplinary and thematic approach, and is concentrated in research institutes and schools. Maastricht University has around 20,000 students and 4,700 employees. Reflecting the university's strong international profile, a fair amount of both students and staff are from abroad. The university hosts 6 faculties: Faculty of Health, Medicine and Life Sciences, Faculty of Law, School of Business and Economics, Faculty of Science and Engineering, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, Faculty of Psychology and Neuroscience. http://www.maastrichtuniversity.nl/
Faculty of Science and Engineering
The Faculty of Science and Engineering (FSE) is home to several outstanding departments in education and research. Students and scientists contribute to education programmes at the bachelor's, master's and PhD levels and take part in innovative research in the fields of science, technology, engineering and mathematics.
Brightlands Chemelot Campus
Brightlands Chemelot Campus boosts innovation and business growth by giving tenants access to talent, knowledge, infrastructure and entrepreneurship. This enables this vibrant community to create performance materials, sustainable processes and biomedical solutions for a more sustainable world. Brightlands Chemelot Campus is the ideal breeding ground for materials science and innovation.
We maken het je graag makkelijk, log in voor deze en andere handige functies: