Fusion Power (EPSRC CDT)
The Fusion Power (EPSRC CDT) is a research-based course combining training and research in fusion-relevant fields like plasma physics, materials science, and computational modelling, with initial taught modules followed by a major research project.
Open - applications are still being accepted
Open! Deadline - 12:00 midday UK time on Wednesday 7 January 2026 for most Oxford scholarships and final application deadline for entry in 2026-27
- Expected length:
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- Full time: 4 years
- Part time: 8 years
- Expected start date:
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- Full time:
- Part time:
- English language level:
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- Standard level required
About the course
The Fusion Power Centre for Doctoral Training (CDT) is provided by a collaboration between six UK universities (Durham, Liverpool, Manchester, Oxford, Sheffield, and York), other research organisations including Culham Centre for Fusion Energy, and industry such as Tokamak Energy, First Light Fusion and OxfordSigma.
You will be trained to doctoral-level (a PhD is known as a DPhil at Oxford) in disciplines related to fusion power. A significant number of fully-funded four-year full-time and eight-year part-time doctoral studentships are expected to be available each year. The CDT expects to train at least 80 students over five intakes from 2024 to 2028.
You will train and study alongside students undertaking the DPhil in Materials, together forming an Oxford cohort of research students in materials. The majority of projects are expected to collaborate with the wider fusion industry. In Oxford, students will focus on materials for fusion power.
The plasma-facing components, magnets and breeding blanket of any future fusion tokamak will be subjected to some of the most extreme engineering environments possible, with high temperatures, stresses and extreme levels of radiation damage. For fusion to be feasible as an economic power source, the materials used must be able to survive these conditions, retaining usable thermal and mechanical properties, for five years or more. Fusion CDT projects in Oxford will work on solving these challenges and making fusion a reality.
You will have access to a range of fusion materials facilities within Oxford and across the UK, and international links provide access to many other fusion devices around the world.
The combination of world-leading experts and world-class facilities creates an outstanding training environment for the next generation of fusion scientists - the generation who may exploit STEP, ITER, NIF and other international experiments to make fusion energy a reality.
Course structure
The course is normally carried out in four years of full-time study (or eight years of part-time study) under the supervision of an experienced member of staff. The first year (first two years for if you are studying part-time) will be focused on training. All students are registered at the University of Oxford.
If studying full-time, you will spend the first eight months of the course (the first 16 months if studying part-time), attending a number of intensive one-week or two-week technical fusion modules designed to provide the best possible platform for your substantial research project. Please note that the modules offered may change to reflect the latest academic thinking and expertise of staff.
During your first year if studying full-time (your first two years if studying part-time) , you will also attend 'Frontiers of Fusion and Interfaces', an annual workshop which features fascinating talks by well-known and internationally-respected external speakers. Students from all cohorts (and their supervisors) will gather for a scientific meeting exploring a range of fusion issues and how they link to related fields, such as fission, advanced instrumentation, technological plasmas, and more.
The remaining three years of the full-time course (six years if studying part-time) will be spent conducting research (see Further information about research below).
Core components
Research areas
You will have the opportunity to undertake research within the specialised themes of this course.
Course details
Entry requirements
For entry in 2026-27