ø£Ąū¼§

28 April 2022

Cyrine Ben Belagem, a guest PhD student from University of Sfax in Tunisia, is visiting the Division of Engineering Materials to perform material characterizations using Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM). The visit will last for two months.

Mattias Calmunger, Cyrine Ben Belagem and Mohamed Loukil in the lab.

The topic of PhD thesis is “Elaboration and studies of the physico-chemical properties of phase change composite materials.” Cyrine is doing her doctoral studies under the supervision of Professor Makki Abdmouleh from University of Sfax.

“First and foremost, I'd like to express my gratitude to Linköping University for providing me with this opportunity. It has made a significant difference in my work. I am ecstatic to be the start of collaboration between the University of Sfax and the Linköping University” says Cyrine.

“We are very happy to start this collaboration with the University of Sfax and we hope to strengthen it with research projects in the near future”, says Mohamed Loukil, Associate Professor and supervisor of Cyrine during her stay at Linköping University.

“International collaboration such this is important to strengthen the research at the division. We are happy to have Cyrine in our lab as a good start of possible long-term collaboration with the University of Sfax.” says Mattias Calmunger, Associate professor and the Head of the Division.

Contact

Organisation

Latest news from LiU

A man in a lab coat holding a tube of blue liquid.

Electrodes created using light

Visible light can be used to create electrodes from conductive plastics completely without hazardous chemicals. This is shown in a new study carried out by researchers at Linköping and Lund universities.

Ryggtavlan pƄ en man.

Greater risk that the political right falls for conspiracy theories

People who lean politically to the right are more likely to fall for conspiracy theories. But regardless of ideology, we tend to accept political claims that align with our own beliefs. This is shown in a doctoral thesis from LiU.

A man kneeling down on a field holding a grass mat.

Artificial turf in the Nordic climate – a question of sustainability

Artificial turf football pitches are better than natural turf from a sustainability perspective – with some reservations. This is demonstrated by researchers at LiUy in a new study using life cycle analyses.