Research Fellowship Opportunity: Electronics
General category name: Electronics
Advisor: Jacob Dodson, Ph.D., Senior Research Mechanical Engineer, AFRL Munitions Directorate
Reliability of Electronics in Extreme Environments
Our group pursues research at the fundamental level to understand material and component failure behavior, modify dynamics, and increase electronics survivability in ordnance systems under harsh mechanical loading conditions. This is an exceptional opportunity to perform academic-oriented basic research in structural dynamics and instrumentation of electronic systems at the Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL) Munitions Directorate at Eglin AFB, FL. The postdoctoral fellow will work closely with AFRL researchers to design novel diagnostics and perform experimental studies of both simple and complex electro-mechanical systems’ time- and frequency- domain response to high-amplitude, short duration impulsive loads. Successful candidates will have experience in structural dynamics experimentation and diagnostics, analysis, and/or simulation.
We are interested in candidates who will conduct research in one or multiple of the following areas:
(1) direct simulation and/or experimental validation of transient time- and frequency-domain system response (using such methods as modal analysis);
(2) estimation of the dynamic state of the system using model-based estimation techniques;
(3) development of novel experimental testing methods for evaluating the shock-survivability and response of materials, sensors, electronics, and mechanical interfaces;
(4) development of instrumentation, methods, and metrics to characterize the internal mechanical environment of a complex electromechanical system under impulsive loading;
(5) modeling and design of experiments with highly-coupled variables (i.e., design of experiments), which could include multiphase physics (e.g., blast-driven impact);
(6) development of innovative methods for increasing computational efficiency and accuracy of transient dynamic simulations, with specific focus on propagation through interfaces with parametric variance (i.e., uncertainty in interface properties).
This position is restricted to US citizens only.
Questions? Contact: techtransfer@doolittleinstitute.org