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5 Dimitri Pletser Imperial College London United Kingdom Dimitri Pletser is a graduate of the TU Delft in the Netherlands with an MSc. in Chemical Engineering. After working on the Fukushima Monitoring Database at the IAEA in Vienna he decided to pursue a PhD at Imperial College Londons Centre for Nuclear Engineering. His work revolves around the clean-up of the Fukushima site. In collaboration with Hitachi he is developing a suitable immobilisation process for spent adsorbents generated by the treatment of effluent cooling water. Scholarship Recipients - Graduate Level - 5000 Peter Martin University of Bristol United Kingdom Peter graduated with a first class honours degree in Geology from the School of Earth Sciences at the University of Bristol in 2013. After a brief period working as a research assistant also at the University of Bristol he was invited to undertake a postgraduate degree. Peter is currently a doctoral student within the Interface Analysis Centre a specialist materials and nuclear science hub at the University of Bristol. His current research under the supervision of Dr. Tom Scott focuses on the incident at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant spanning both nuclear forensics as well as future radiation mapping systems having made multiple visits to the affected region. Peter is the author of a number of scientific publications in both the nuclear field as well as within the wider area of materials science. Takenori Ozutsumi Tohoku University Japan Takenori Ozutsumi was born in Yamanashi Japan in 1989. He enrolled in Faculty of Engineering in Tohoku University in 2008. As he was junior in undergraduate studies the Fukushima Daiichi nuclearpowerplantaccidenthadasignificantimpactonhim.In2014hewentontoDepartment of Quantum Science and Energy Engineering in Tohoku Niibori and he has been engaged in fundamental research on migration behavior of radionuclide in near surface underground. He strongly hopes such a knowledge is helpful for the safety assessment of the disposal facility of nuclear waste caused by Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant accident. In the spring of next year as a Doctor Course student at Niibori lab he will start developing a more reliable model to describe the complicated migration of radionuclides under an unsaturated condition. Hannah Paterson Energus United Kingdom Hannah graduated with a Master of Chemistry degree from Edinburgh University Scotland in 2014. She is currently on a full-time two-year graduate development programme called nuclear- graduates. During her time on the scheme Hannah has been undertaking further postgraduate study at the University of Manchester in Nuclear Science and Technology and devoting time to promote science and engineering to young children. On the graduate scheme Hannah has had the privilege of working on the high hazard risk reduction vitrification programme at Sellafield Ltd as a Technical Advisor. She also played an important role in strategy development and implementation of European Union legislation during a secondment in the Radioactive Waste and Decommissioning Policy team in the Scottish Government. Hannah is now undertaking a secondment at the US Department of Energy and is continuing her University studies with the goal of becoming a senior technical lead in the future.