Recruitment for 2025

We have one studentship available for the first cohort of YES•DTN to start in October 2025, based in the School of Chemistry at the University of Leeds.
The studentship will remain open until a suitable applicant is found.  Please note: Applications from international (non-home fee rated) candidates cannot be accepted after 30 May 2025.


Understanding impacts of atmospheric oxidation processes in the remote marine boundary layer on greenhouse gases

Dr Lisa Whalley and Professor Daniel Stone

School of Chemistry, University of Leeds


Please read the information carefully, as not supplying the correct information will impact your application.

Please note: there is no option for you to provide your own project.

If you have any questions about applications please contact us at yes-dtn@leeds.ac.uk.

Studentships

We offer 25 – 26 fully funded studentships each year, to be based at either the University of York or the University of Leeds.
The studentships cover:

  • a personal stipend (tax-free allowance that you don’t have to pay back) at Research Council UK (RCUK) rates for 3.5 years
  • university fees
  • generous support for research costs, fieldwork, training and conference travel.

We can offer about 7 funded studentships each year to international applicants

  • we cover all your university fees as well (regardless of home-international fee difference), and you will receive the standard UKRI rate stipend.
  • however, we cannot cover costs associated with relocation to the UK which you may incur, e.g. accommodation, travel, student visa, international health surcharge.
  • See the UK Govt. website for more information on student visas (including costs) and the health surcharge. You can also get in touch with the Student Visa Advice service at the University of Leeds.

Application process

You must complete the YES•DTN application form.
The YES•DTN application form is a combined CV and structured personal statement.
The structured personal statement asks you to respond to 5 questions, within a word limit of about 250 words per question.

  1. What motivates you to do a PhD?  
  2. What excites you about your chosen project? Why is it important to work on this topic? 
  3. How does your professional and academic background prepare you to do a PhD? 
  4. How do your existing skills match with the required skills and which skills do you hope to acquire during the PhD? 
  1. Why is a YES•DTN studentship the right way for you to get a PhD? 

More information on the required information for the CV component can be found here.


Please do not email your personal CV and personal statement to us as we cannot accept them.

Before you apply

We suggest you contact supervisors by email, with the project description listed as the subject, to arrange an online or in-person meeting to discuss the project.

Carefully draft your email to the supervisor. Make sure to make is project specific and include detail that shows that you are genuinely interested in the project and that you have done some background reading. Academics are very busy at that time of year so might not reply immediately. They are more likely to take your interest seriously if you draft a meaningful email rather than a general request. More information can be found in our FAQs.

This discussion is a two-way opportunity: you want to learn more about the project and the skills/interests required and the supervisor can get a feeling for your motivation and interests.

We do not use references as part of our application process. Your application will be reviewed by the academic supervisor of the project and the YES•DTN directorship as part of our shortlisting process. Shortlisted candidates will be invited for interview, and you have opportunity to visit our campuses before the interviews, if possible.

Our process aims to reduce bias at all stages and we recruit candidates from all backgrounds and with a diversity of experiences.