professor profile picture

Michael Rychlik

Professor Dr. at Technical University of Munich

Technical University of Munich

Country flag

Germany

Has open position

This profile is automatically generated from trusted academic sources.

Google Scholar

.

ORCID

.

LinkedIn

Social connections

How do Turkish students reach out?

Sign in for free to see their profile details and contact information.

Meet Kite AI

Contact this professor

Send an email
LinkedIn
ORCID
Google Scholar
Academic Page

Research Interests

Biochemistry

20%

Food Science

70%

Chemistry

20%

Medical Science

20%

Sustainable Food

20%

Terpenoid Chemistry

20%

Lc-ms

20%

Ask ApplyKite AI

Start chatting
How can you help me contact this professor?
What are this professor's research interests?
How should I write an email to this professor?

Positions2

Publisher
source

Michael Rychlik

University Name
.

Technical University of Munich

PhD Scholarship in Vitamin B12 Research – MSCA Doctoral Network on Micronutrients in Sustainable and Nutritious Diets

The Technical University of Munich (TUM) invites applications for a PhD scholarship in vitamin B12 research as part of the MSCA Doctoral Network MICROSUNSET, funded by the European Union’s Horizon Europe programme. This position is based at the Chair of Analytical Food Chemistry within the School of Life Sciences, offering a unique opportunity to join a dynamic, interdisciplinary consortium of seven leading European universities and numerous industry partners. MICROSUNSET aims to address micronutrient deficiencies in Europe as diets shift toward more plant-based foods, focusing on the bio-accessibility and bioavailability of micronutrients and strategies to enhance their concentration in sustainable diets. The PhD project centers on investigating the bio-accessibility of vitamin B12 from plant-based, animal products, and microalgae. You will extend and apply stable isotope dilution assay (SIDA/LC-MS/MS) methods for quantifying vitamin B12 and cobamides in various foods, including milk, fermented products, meat, and algae. The research includes surveying vitamin B12 and cobamides in fermented foods and algae, developing and validating bio-accessibility models, and synthesizing reference compounds microbiologically. The project is exploratory and aims to generate new insights into plant-based foods and algae as sources of highly bioaccessible vitamin B12. Throughout your doctoral studies, you will collaborate with other Doctoral Candidates in MICROSUNSET, contributing to evidence-based knowledge about micronutrient content, intake, digestibility, and bioavailability from plant-based diets. Planned external stays include exchanges at the Technical University of Denmark (DTU), Arla Innovation Centre Denmark, and University of Helsinki, Finland, to cross-validate methods and participate in innovation projects. Responsibilities include enrolling in the Graduate Center of Life Sciences at TUM, participating in MICROSUNSET training (12 ECTS), dissemination, communication, reporting, and exploitation activities, publishing and presenting research results, preparing and defending a doctoral thesis, and supporting student supervision and teaching at BSc and MSc levels. Applicants must hold a two-year master's degree (120 ECTS) in Food Sciences or a related field, with hands-on experience in analytical equipment (HPLC, LC-MS/MS), sample preparation, and quality assurance. Strong communication skills in English, experience with international collaboration, and a structured, analytical approach to work are required. Research dissemination experience is advantageous. Eligibility requires not having lived, studied, or worked in Germany for more than 12 months in the last 36 months and not already holding a doctoral degree. The position is fully funded by the EU MSCA grant, offering a monthly gross salary of 4768 EUR (before tax) for 36 months, with deductions for taxes, pension, paid holidays, and labour market contributions. The expected start date is 1 July 2026 or as soon as possible thereafter. TUM is committed to diversity and encourages applications from candidates of all backgrounds, including women returning from career breaks and disabled candidates. To apply, submit your complete application as one PDF file to [email protected] by 15 April 2026 (23:59 German time). The PDF must include a cover letter, CV, certified MSc diploma, grade transcripts, and contact information or letters from two references. Ensure your CV documents eligibility requirements. Applications received after the deadline will not be considered. For further information, visit MICROSUNSET , Chair of Analytical Food Chemistry , and TUM Graduate Center . Data protection information is available at TUM Privacy Policy .

just-published

Publisher
source

Michael Rychlik

University Name
.

Technical University of Munich

PhD Scholarship in Folate Research within the MSCA Doctoral Network on Micronutrients in Sustainable and Nutritious Diets

The Technical University of Munich (TUM) invites applications for a PhD scholarship in folate research, as part of the MSCA Doctoral Network MICROSUNSET, funded by the European Union’s Horizon Europe programme. This position is based at the Chair of Analytical Food Chemistry within the School of Life Sciences, offering a unique opportunity to join a dynamic, interdisciplinary consortium of seven leading European universities and numerous industry partners. MICROSUNSET aims to address micronutrient deficiencies in Europe as diets shift toward more plant-based foods, focusing on bio-accessibility and bioavailability of micronutrients, and strategies to enhance their concentration in sustainable diets. The PhD project centers on folate bio-accessibility and bioavailability in foods made from protein-rich plants and algae. You will survey folate contents in fermented foods and algae using stable isotope dilution assays (SIDAs), optimize folate levels through fermentation and growing parameters, and develop a human study to analyze folate plasma levels. Advanced LC-MS/MS methods will be used and further developed for folate determination in foods and clinical samples. The research is exploratory, aiming to generate new insights into plant-based foods and algae as sources of folates. Collaboration is integral to MICROSUNSET, with opportunities for external research stays at the University of Helsinki (in vitro bio-accessibility experiments), Koralo Foods (optimizing folate in fermented fish analogues from algae), and the University of Queensland (LC-MS/MS method optimization). The project also involves active participation in MICROSUNSET training, dissemination, communication, and reporting activities, as well as publishing and presenting research results internationally. Applicants must hold a two-year master's degree (120 ECTS) in Food Sciences or a related field, with hands-on experience in analytical equipment (HPLC, LC-MS/MS), sample preparation, and quality assurance of analytical methods. Strong English communication skills, experience in international collaboration, and research dissemination are desirable. Eligibility requires that candidates have not lived, studied, or worked in Germany for more than 12 months in the last 36 months and do not already hold a doctoral degree. Academic approval and enrolment in the Graduate Center of Life Sciences at TUM are mandatory. The position is fully funded by the EU MSCA grant, offering a monthly gross salary of 4768 EUR (before tax) for 36 months, covering salary, pension, paid holidays, taxes, and labour market contributions. The expected start date is 1st July 2026 or as soon as possible thereafter. TUM is committed to diversity and encourages applications from candidates of all backgrounds, including those who have had career breaks or bring additional diversity dimensions. To apply, submit your complete application as one PDF file to [email protected] by 15th April 2026. The PDF should include a cover letter, CV, certified MSc diploma, grade transcripts, and contact information or letters from two references. Ensure your CV documents eligibility requirements. Applications received after the deadline will not be considered. For further information, visit the TUM School of Life Sciences website or contact Prof. Dr. Michael Rychlik.

just-published

Articles10

Collaborators2

Stefan Asam

Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München

GERMANY

Thomas Becker

Technical University of Munich

GERMANY