Self-Healing Ionic Liquid Lubricants
ABG-132883 | Thesis topic | |
2025-07-14 | Public/private mixed funding |

- Chemistry
- Physics
- Engineering sciences
Topic description
About the Project
Lubrication is an essential and ubiquitous technology that reduces degradation by wear, increases lifetime, and reduces replacement and repair costs of moving parts in mechanical devices. Tribological contacts currently account for ~23% of global energy consumption and contributes significantly to CO2 emissions. This project addresses the urgent need to replace current products that are toxic to humans and detrimental to the environment with high performing, versatile, safe lubricants based on a novel platform technology: amphiphilic bilayer self-assemblies in ionic liquids.
In this project we will systematically vary molecular structure of amphiphile and ionic liquid components and engineer the intermolecular forces to assemble bilayers that optimise energy dissipation to improve lubrication performance. Structure and dynamics will be investigated over timescales from sub-ns to s or longer, and over length scales from molecular (within bilayers) to collective, cooperative motions by combining a range of cutting-edge X-ray, neutron beam and optical microscopy techniques, coupled to shear rheometry at local and major international research facilities. This will be used to develop the molecular design rules for formulation these novel lubricant systems.
About this opportunity:
Interested in starting a PhD in late 2025 / early 2026 and completing the program in 3.5 years? We are looking for curious, energetic, and self-motivated candidates, who are passionate about solving interdisciplinary problems.
Funding category
Funding further details
Presentation of host institution and host laboratory
More info about the Supervisors
https://www.sydney.edu.au/science/about/our-people/academic-staff/gregory-warr.html
https://www.sydney.edu.au/science/about/our-people/academic-staff/joy-jiang.html
PhD title
Country where you obtained your PhD
Institution awarding doctoral degree
Candidate's profile
Requirements:
- a major in Chemistry (or related fields e.g., Materials Science or Physics or Chemical Engineering)
- a 4-year undergraduate degree (with First Class Honours or with a research thesis), or a Master’s Degree by mid-late 2025
- prior research experience (preferably with publication)
- excellent communication skills in English (e.g., either English native speaker or with IELTS >6.5 across all sections; or TOFEL >88 overall, with >22 across all section)
- an overall GPA of above 3.3/4.0 (or >83/100 or top 15% in your class)
- graduating from one of the top 200 universities worldwide (required), preferably top 100 worldwide
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