The Natural Sciences Research Showcase 2025 was a virtual poster competition in which a panel of experts evaluated 12 posters submitted by PhD students across our Faculty.
The judges were the Directors of Postgraduate Studies of the five FoNS departments or an academic representative. They decided two of the three award categories ('Best poster' and the 'Runner-up poster'), and Imperial staff and students were able to contribute to the 'People's Choice Award' by submitting their vote online by Thursday 11th September, 15:00.
Efthymios Costa, in the Department of Mathematics, won both First Place and the People’s Choice Award, for his poster which looked at 'From Entropy to Insight: Discovering Groups in Mixed-Type Data’. Read more here.

View the posters and Vote for your favourite one! - You will need to log into your Box account with you Imperial username and password!
1. Mili Ostojic, Department of Life Sciences
Eavesdropping on Birds Using Drones
2. Carl Tsang, Department of Life Sciences
Investigating Hcp-Effector complex delivery Mechanisms via Type VI Secretion System Using Cryo-EM
3. Cecil Lee-Grant, Department of Life Sciences
Reconstructing Cyrtandra: Exploring dispersal and diversification
4. Gail Sucharitakul, Centre for Environmental Policy
Do Voluntary Nature Credit Markets Deliver on Their Promise of “Win-Win” Outcomes?
5. Alina Yang, Department of Physics
Simulated Detection of Methane Released from Permafrost Thaw with Atmospheric Measurements
6. Lucas Russell, Department of Physics
The Higgs Boson and Matter-Antimatter Asymmetry
7. Geoff Pugsley, Department of Physics
The secret life of clouds: Observing cloud nighttime processes
8. Efthymios Costa, Department of Mathematics
From Entropy to Insight: Discovering Groups in Mixed-Type Data
9. Ella Orme, Department of Mathematics
Multi-view biclustering via non-negative matrix tri-factorisation
10. Tara Salal, Department of Chemistry
Oxalate Conversion Coatings in Cold Forming of Steel
11. Dat Doan, Department of Chemistry
Computation-Guided Design of Organic Redox-Active Molecules For Electrochemical Storage
12. Eunyoung Hong, Department of Chemistry
Ferrocene Derivatives Enable Ultrasensitive Perovskite Photodetectors with Enhanced Reverse Bias Stability