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Biomedical Engineering: Human Thermal Comfort and Behaviour, Human Thermoregulation, Infra-Red [...]

Swansea University

United Kingdom

On-site

GBP 20,000 - 24,000

Full time

6 days ago
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Job summary

A prestigious university in the UK is offering a PhD position in Biomedical Engineering focused on evaluating thermal comfort and the impact of infrared heating. The successful candidate will engage in interdisciplinary research, utilizing innovative facilities to monitor human physiological responses. This role covers full tuition fees and provides an annual stipend at the UKRI rate, along with additional research expenses, making it a valuable opportunity. Candidates must have a 2.1 undergraduate degree in Engineering or a related discipline, and meet English language requirements.

Benefits

Full tuition fees coverage
Annual stipend
Research expenses provision

Qualifications

  • Candidates must have a recognized undergraduate degree.
  • Experience in thermal comfort studies preferred.
  • IELTS 6.5 overall or equivalent.

Responsibilities

  • Monitor perceptual and physiological parameters related to thermal comfort and energy expenditure.
  • Conduct interdisciplinary research focusing on radiant heating technologies.
  • Develop protocols for evaluating human thermal regulation.

Skills

Interdisciplinary collaboration
Physiological assessment
Thermal comfort evaluation

Education

Undergraduate degree at 2.1 level in Engineering or related field
Job description

Organisation/Company Swansea University Department Central Research Field Engineering » Biomedical engineering Researcher Profile First Stage Researcher (R1) Positions PhD Positions Country United Kingdom Application Deadline 2 Feb 2026 - 23:59 (Europe/London) Type of Contract Temporary Job Status Full-time Hours Per Week 35 Offer Starting Date 1 Apr 2026 Is the job funded through the EU Research Framework Programme? Not funded by a EU programme Is the Job related to staff position within a Research Infrastructure? No

Offer Description

Infrared heating heats people and surfaces directly, without heating the air in between. Thus, it is claimed that radiant heating can provide thermal comfort at lower internal air temperatures, thereby saving home and industrial energy. Furthermore, rapid response rates could enable heating to be delivered only where and when a room is occupied. These factors have led to claims by manufacturers of IR efficiencies like heat pumps. Currently the Standard Assessment Procedure (SAP) attributes infrared heating the same CO2 equivalent as direct electrical heating. However, it is currently unclear if this is the case. As this is the methodology used by government to assess and compare the energy and environmental performance of dwellings, the current rating disincentivises developers from specifying the technology, hence there is a drive from the industry to address this.

To answer this question requires an interdisciplinary approach, combining Industry input alongside physical sciences and physiological assessment of human temperature.

Indoor thermal comfort is perceived in humans with wide variance, by a variety of methods and does not have one industry standardised validated method. Equally, the current standard for testing the radiant efficiency of low temperature radiant heaters (BSEN 60675-3 (2021)) does not consider human thermal comfort. Humans are radiant objects. More than 60% of the sense of comfort or discomfort is governed by their radiant heat gain or loss, only 15% by air temperature and movement. This means a human may express feelings of warmth if either they are absorbing heat from the environment or reducing the radiation of body heat to it. For most people, the body is either gaining or losing too much body heat if the environment is more than 26°C or less than 16°C, with associated feelings of discomfort.

At Swansea University we can monitor a range of perceptual, physiological and temperature parameters, alongside an array of other physiological monitoring tools to measure energy expenditure, and in blood sampling under thermoneutral or hyperthermic environments. In addition, SPECIFIC is an Innovation and Knowledge Centre (IKC) based at Swansea University who focus on energy technology research particularly in developing "Active Buildings." These buildings are designed to generate, store, and release their own renewable energy, aiming to reduce carbon emissions and address energy challenges. SPECIFIC have constructed a climatically controlled room capable of measuring the flow of electrical inputs and thermal outputs accurately independent of outdoor conditions. Finally, Herschel Infrared Ltd are a project partner who are a leading UK brand specializing in infrared heating solutions. They offer energy-efficient infrared heating panels for homes, commercial spaces, and outdoor areas. Their headquarters are in Bristol.

Combined, the ability to sensitively evaluate a human's perception of thermal comfort under well controlled environments offers an opportunity to develop protocols that seek to evaluate human thermal regulation and comfort in response to different infra‑red radiant heat environments.

English Language: IELTS 6.5 Overall (5.5+ each comp.) or Swansea University recognised equivalent. Full details of our English Language policy, including certificate time validity, can be found herep>

Note for international and European applicants: details of how your qualification compares to the published academic entry requirements can be found on our Country Specific Entry Requirements page.

PhD: Applicants for PhD must hold an undergraduate degree at 2.1 level (or non-UK equivalent as defined by Swansea University) in Engineering or similar relevant science discipline. We also welcome applications from graduates in computational science or mathematics.

Additional Information

This scholarship covers the full cost of tuition fees and an annual stipend at UKRI rate (currently £20,780 for 2025/26).

Additional research expenses of up to £1,000 per year will also be available.

Selection process

Please see our website for further information

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