b'Partner News Autumn 2022 7IET updatesPostgraduate Research Award winners 2022Congratulations to our 2022 IET Postgraduate Research Awardwinners from around the world.revolutionised many modern day electronic inventions. He is using optical spectroscopy and electrical methods to unravel fundamental optoelectronic properties of mixed lead-tin halide perovskite materials, which are key components of the next generation all-perovskite tandem solar cells. IET Postgraduate ScholarshipRonnie Smith is at the Edinburgh Centre for an Outstanding ResearcherIET Postgraduate Prize for Robotics, as part of the EPSRC Centre 10,000 to Xianghao Zhan Four awards of 2,500 tofor Doctoral Training in Robotics and Xianghao is from China and is a PhDValeria Raffuzzi, Jai Ge, Ronnie SmithAutonomous Systems at Heriot-Watt candidate in the Department ofand Saylee Jangam University and the University of Edinburgh. Bioengineering, Stanford University, USA. HeHis research focuses on enabling pro-active focuses on the optimisation of computationalrobotic assistance for people who need modelling of traumatic brain injury.support during activities of daily life at home. His research enables a better understandingHis research brings together topics of the brain deformation mechanism andaround humans in-the-loop and gives how the biomechanical loading results in BBBthem ownership over their own assistive disruption. His work will enable clinicians totechnology.monitor TBI risks in a real-time manner.Valeria Raffuzzi is a PhD student in Nuclear Engineering at the University of Cambridge. Xianghao said that this award served as theHer research focuses on accelerating motivation to start another journey in hishigh-fidelity computational methods for research. With this encouragement, Xianghaoneutron transport simulations via optimised will dedicate himself to delving into therepresentations of nuclear data. This work is missing link between the brain deformationcrucial to support and accelerate the design and the TBI pathologies. phase of nuclear fission and future fusionSaylee Jangam is a PhD student in reactors.Bioengineering at Imperial College London. Her research focuses on the development of wearable microneedle biosensors for infection monitoring to detect early warning signs of sepsis and optimise antimicrobial drug dosing. Hudswell InternationalShe co-developed SPECTRA-tube, a Research ScholarshipJia Ge is from China and is a PhD studentnovel clinical specimen collection and 5,000 to Krishanu Dey at the School of Mechanical and Aerospacetransportation device to provide remote Krishanu Dey is a Cambridge IndiaEngineering, Queens University Belfast. Hisdiagnosis of tuberculosis for patients in Ramanujan PhD scholar in Physics atresearch interest is advanced manufacturingrural India.the Cavendish Laboratory, University ofof aircraft carbon fibre reinforced Cambridge. Belonging to a remote borderthermoplastic composite. Jia is addressing theAre you inspired to apply for funding? town in the state of Assam in India, he hasurgent needs of decarbonising the aerospaceVisit: www.theiet.org/impact-society/always been fascinated by light-electricityindustry through enhanced manufacturingawards-scholarships/iet-postgraduate-or photon-electron interactions that haveefficiency and use of sustainable materials. research-awards/'