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Molecular Simulation and Data-Driven Discovery of Smarter, Greener Formulations

Reference number ENGMDM005

Funding
Funded
Study mode
Full-time
Apply by
Year round
Start date
Year round
Subject area
Engineering

Postgraduate Online Open Event

Meet us online on Wednesday 17 June 2026 to find out more about postgraduate study at the University of Liverpool.

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Overview

This project pioneers formulation design by integrating statistical optimisation tools with advanced molecular simulations and experimental validation with industry partners, Unilever. It will identify optimal compositions from vast molecular design spaces, reveal how molecular chemistry drives performance, and accelerate the discovery of smarter, greener ingredients.

About this opportunity

Predicting optimal compositions in formulations is a major challenge with major industrial relevance – home-care products alone represent a multi-billion pound sector where ingredient selection remains largely trial-and-error. In surfactant-based systems, this requires understanding the complex aqueous chemistry of small molecular components and how they interact with fibrous materials. Exploring this empirically for the thousands of components available to formulation design would be resource-intensive and impractical. This motivates the PhD project, which will exploit a combined data science–molecular simulation approach to optimise existing formulation products and, when combined with state-of-the-art cheminformatics approaches, design new ingredients for sustainable product innovation.

You will employ Bayesian optimisation to systematically reduce large catalogues of potential formulation ingredients based on existing data. For the selected subset, enhanced-sampling molecular dynamics approaches will be used to determine mechanisms and rates for the reversible binding of molecules to surfaces in wet and dry conditions—key indicators of ingredient performance. The simulations will reveal how molecular topology and chemistry control ingredient behaviour in solution and interactions with surfactant-rich interfaces.

By integrating these molecular insights with Bayesian inference and cheminformatics, the computational tools developed in this project will enable the efficient selection and prediction of new formulation ingredients for direct evaluation in experiments carried out by industry partner, Unilever. This collaboration provides access to real-world data and problems, with direct relevance to sustainable chemistry and strong employability outcomes. As such, we are seeking a highly motivated candidate with interests in molecular modelling, digital design for real-world problems, and combining advanced tools in data science with complex molecular-scale problems.

The project will be supervised by Dr Aaron Finney and Prof Simon Maskell from the School of Engineering at the University of Liverpool, and Dr Martin Crossman and Mr Tinto Alencherry from Unilever. The supervisory team brings complementary expertise spanning molecular simulation, Bayesian methods, interfacial science and cheminformatics, providing the full range of skills required to guide the research. Supported by Unilever, this PhD offers close collaboration with industrial R&D teams, linking predictive computational models to sustainable and efficient product innovation.

This project is offered under the EPSRC Centre for Doctoral Training in Digital and Automated Materials Chemistry based in the Materials Innovation Factory at the University of Liverpool, the largest industry-academia colocation in UK physical science. The successful candidate will benefit from training in robotic, digital, chemical and physical thinking, which they will apply in their domain-specific research in materials design, discovery and processing. PhD training has been developed with 35 industrial partners and is designed to generate flexible, employable, enterprising researchers who can communicate across domains.

 

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Who is this for?

Candidates will have, or be due to obtain, a Master’s Degree or equivalent in Chemistry, Engineering, Materials Science, Physics, or related disciplines. Exceptional candidates with a First Class undergraduate degree or equivalent in an appropriate field will also be considered.

The minimum English Language requirements for international candidates is IELTS 6.5 overall (with no band below 5.5) or equivalent. Find out more about English language requirements.

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How to apply

  1. 1. Contact supervisors

    Please register and apply online in full at the earliest opportunity, indicating the subject area as Materials Engineering.

    We will interview on a rolling basis and fill the position on a first come, first served principle. We will close the application once a suitable candidate is found (this may be before the deadline).

    Supervisors Email address Staff profile URL
    Dr Aaron Finney Aaron.Finney@liverpool.ac.uk https://www.liverpool.ac.uk/people/aaron-finney
    Prof Simon Maskell S.Maskell@liverpool.ac.uk https://www.liverpool.ac.uk/people/simon-maskell
    Martin Crossman
    Tinto Alencherry
  2. 2. Prepare your application documents

    Review our CDT guide on “How to Apply carefully as it may differ from a standard application process. You may need the following documents to complete your online application:

    • University transcripts and degree certificates to date
    • Passport details
    • English language certificates (international applicants only)
    • A personal statement
    • A curriculum vitae (CV)
    • Contact details for two proposed supervisors
    • Names and contact details of two referees.
  3. 3. Apply

    Finally, register and apply online. You'll receive an email acknowledgment once you've submitted your application. We'll be in touch with further details about what happens next.

    We want all our Staff and Students to feel that Liverpool is an inclusive and welcoming environment that actively celebrates and encourages diversity. We are committed to working with students to make all reasonable project adaptations including supporting those with caring responsibilities, disabilities or other personal circumstances.

    This position will remain open until a suitable candidate has been found.

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Funding your PhD

The EPSRC DAMC CDT Studentship will cover full home tuition fees and a maintenance grant for 4 years starting at the UKRI minimum (£21,805 for 2026-27 academic year). The Studentship also comes with a Research Training Support Grant to fund consumables, conference attendance, etc

Studentships are available to any prospective student wishing to apply including both home and international students. While EPSRC funding will not cover international fees, a limited number of scholarships to meet the fee difference will be available to support outstanding international students.

If you have a disability you may be entitled to a Disabled Students’ Allowance on top of your studentship to help cover the costs of any additional support that a person studying for a doctorate might need as a result.

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Contact us

Have a question about this research opportunity or studying a PhD with us? Please get in touch with us, using the contact details below, and we’ll be happy to assist you.

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