LEVERHULME CENTENARY DOCTORAL SCHOLARSHIP

Application Opens: 3 November 2025 ; Deadline: 6 March 2026, 12pm

LOCATION: United Kingdom

The Leverhulme Centenary Doctoral Scholarships will open in November 2025 for submission in March 2026. While the scheme requirements remain largely as set out for the 2023 round, this round includes additional studentships, as well as funding for postdoctoral opportunities and programme administration costs.

For UK universities to fund up to 30 Leverhulme Doctoral Scholarships in an interdisciplinary priority research area for that institution.

Following the Trust’s recent £100 million commitment to mark its 100th anniversary, the Leverhulme Centenary Doctoral Scholarships (LCDS) will include:

An increased number of doctoral scholarship places

Additional scholarship places to support students from underrepresented groups in the UK to undertake a master’s plus doctoral programme

An increased number of doctoral scholarships for international students

Dedicated funding to support research and training expenses and cohort-building activities

New funding to support a limited number of postdoctoral level opportunities for LCDS programme graduates

New funding to contribute to dedicated administrative assistance costs

The option to apply as a consortium of up to two universities  

ELIGIBILITY:

Institutional eligibility: The scheme is open to applications from any UK university that holds research degree awarding powers in its own right.

To increase the reach of the scheme and the diversity of institutions the Trust funds, applications will also be accepted from a consortium of a maximum of two universities. In the proposal, one university and one principal applicant must be identified to lead. The principal applicant will submit the proposal and, if an award is made, take responsibility for financial and reporting matters. The funding contract would be held by the lead university.

A university may submit only one application as lead but may partner in multiple applications, provided they are in different disciplinary areas. 

Once a university has selected their preferred bid, they should send the principal applicant’s name, departmental affiliation, and email address to Emily Nisbet. Access will then be granted to the Leverhulme Trust Grants Management System

Eligibility for additional funding: In addition to the 24 four-year doctoral scholarship places, institutions may also recruit six students to a master’s plus PhD programme. 
Students wishing to pursue the master’s plus PhD route need to fulfill the following criteria:

Be a UK domiciled student

Not already have a master’s degree from the host institution

Be from a low-income household background, evidenced by, for example, being in receipt of a full maintenance loan or Special Support loan during their undergraduate studies. 
AND/OR

Be one of the following categories of ethnicity
Black African
Black Caribbean
Black Other
Mixed—White and Black Caribbean
Mixed—White and Black African
Other mixed backgrounds (including Black African, Black Caribbean and Black Other)

Other mixed backgrounds (including Black African, Black Caribbean and Black Other)

There are three elements in the application procedure:

A short application form and a detailed programme description, submitted by the nominated principal applicant from the lead university.

A supporting statement from a designated representative of the university, e.g., the pro-vice-chancellor for research, or someone holding a similar role. Please note that for applications from consortia, supporting statements are required from a designated representative from both participating universities. The Trust will expect to see demonstrable commitment from the host institution(s) for the proposed doctoral center. However, there is no requirement for the university to offer matched studentships in this round.

Institutional approval of the application: the lead applicant university’s normal procedure for approving Leverhulme Trust applications.

BENEFIT:

What the Trust offers:

UK Doctoral Scholarships: UK students undertaking a PhD will each be eligible for a fixed-sum scholarship for up to 48 months of full-time doctoral study. This covers:

maintenance (at UKRI base levels)

tuition fees (at UKRI base levels)

£10,000 to be used to support the individual student’s research and training needs

International Doctoral Scholarships: Up to six fixed-sum scholarships in each award can be made to international students for up to 48 months of full-time doctoral study. This covers:

maintenance (at UKRI base levels)

tuition fees (at the university’s standard international fee rate, up to a maximum of £25,000 per year)

£10,000 to be used to support the individual student’s research and training needs

Master’s Plus Doctoral Scholarships: In addition to the twenty-four standard PhD scholarships, universities can apply for up to six further studentships for a master’s plus doctoral programme. These students can be recruited at any time as part of the three cohorts. 

Each fixed-sum scholarship for up to 60 months of full-time study covers:

Research master’s degree (12 months of full-time study):

maintenance (at UKRI base level)

tuition fees (at the university’s usual UK fee rate, up to a maximum of £12,000)

Doctoral degree (up to 48 months of full-time study):

maintenance (at UKRI base levels)

tuition fees (at UKRI base levels)

£10,000 to be used to support the individual student’s research and training needs, which can be used at any stage of the master’s plus programme.

Please note that these funds are ring-fenced for supporting students from these underrepresented groups.

Funds for cohort-building activities: £75,000 of ring-fenced funding will be made available to support cohort-building activities over the duration of the award.

Funds for post-doctoral support: New for this round, the Trust will provide up to £400,000 of ring-fenced funding to support a programme of post-doctoral opportunities that will help LCDS graduates to transition successfully to academic or non-academic careers. At this stage, applicants will need to provide only an outline of how they would anticipate using these funds. If successful, a detailed description of the activities planned would be requested in year 3 of the award.

Funds for administrative support: New for this round, universities may also request up to £225,000 of funding for dedicated administrative support for the programme.

APPLY

QUANTUM TRANSPORT IN MIXED IONIC-ELECTRONIC CONDUCTORS (PHD SCHOLARSHIP)

Application Deadline: 30 September 2025

LOCATION: Australia

This project will explore transport phenomena in organic mixed ionic-electronic conductors (OMIECs) in various conditions. OMIECs are a class of materials that uniquely combine the ability to conduct both electronic charge carriers (electrons or holes) and mobile ions. 

This is an experimental project, and the candidate will be supervised by A/Prof Soniya Yambem (Primary Supervisor), Dr. Mahboobeh Shahbazi (Associate Supervisor), and Dr. Wendy Purches (External Supervisor, CSIRO). The candidate will have the opportunity to engage in a dynamic environment with members of QUT’s:

Faculty of Science

School of Chemistry and Physics

Centre for Materials Science

Bioelectronics and Biosensors group.

ELIGIBILITY:

Citizenship: Australian, Australian or New Zealander, and International

You need to meet the entry requirements for a QUT research degree, including any English language requirements. You must also:

enroll as a full-time, internal student (unless approval for part-time and/or external study is obtained)

start your degree by 1 March 2026

have a background in

physics

materials science

nanotechnology

electronic engineering.

You should also have a clear understanding of semiconductor physics and devices.

Apply for this scholarship at the same time you apply for admission to a QUT research degree.

The first step is to email Associate Professor Soniya Yambem detailing your academic and research background, your motivation to research in this field, and your interest in this scholarship, and include your CV.

If supported to apply, you will then submit an Expression of Interest (EOI) following the advice at How to apply for a research degree.

In your EOI, nominate Associate Professor Soniya Yambem as your proposed principal supervisor, and copy the URL link to this scholarship page into question 2 of the financial details section.

BENEFIT:

You’ll receive:

A stipend of $40,000 per annum for a maximum duration of 3.5 years while undertaking a QUT PhD. The duration includes an extension of up to 6 months (PhD) if approved for your candidature. This is the full-time, tax-exempt rate, which will index annually.

A tuition fee offset/sponsorship, covering the cost of your tuition fees for the first 4 full-time equivalent years of your doctoral studies.

The opportunity to work with a team of leading researchers and to undertake your own innovative research in and across the field.

APPLY