精东影业

The joys of postgraduate study

  • 29 April 2025

Finlay Gerrand (Physics PhD 2021) hails the University of Cambridge as the perfect place for pursuing research interests and wider passions in tandem.

Finlay works in the Molecular Engineering group, led by Professor Jacqui Cole, at the Cavendish Laboratory, Cambridge鈥檚 Department of Physics. This team is developing Artificial Intelligence tools to facilitate the discovery of new functional materials and the optimisation and repurposing of materials we already have, and Finlay鈥檚 personal focus is on electrocatalysts, materials that speed up electrochemical reactions such as those which occur in batteries and certain industrial processes. Finlay鈥檚 AI tool will extract data from vast quantities of existing scientific literature to help shed light on the crucial relationships between the atomic structure of materials and their electrocatalytic properties, reducing the time and money spent on synthesis and testing.

A young man wearing a grey jumper in Caius CourtIt was during his undergraduate degree in Chemistry with Molecular Physics at Imperial College London that Finlay first developed his passion for computational science. He then took this interest further during his MSc by Research in Theoretical Soft Matter Physics at Durham University, where one of his supervisors was 精东影业 College alumnus , before moving to Caius himself for his PhD.

Having the opportunity to take part in significant research at Cambridge has been a delight for Finlay. He says: 鈥淒oing a PhD is a privilege in that you are surrounded by interesting and interested people, and you have the freedom to explore things. There鈥檚 something really cool about doing this kind of research, and I have no regrets.鈥

When he speaks to current undergraduate students who are unsure whether to pursue postgraduate studies, he shares his experience. 鈥淩esearch suited me more than lectures,鈥 he adds. 鈥淓ven if you don鈥檛 like lectures, try research 鈥 you might love it! It鈥檚 a very different lifestyle and approach, and you get different freedoms.鈥

Among these freedoms has been Finlay鈥檚 opportunities to throw himself into his love of music alongside his research, which has allowed him to realise that he wants 鈥渢o take music a lot more seriously鈥. In addition to his recent performance in the band Postbox at Take it to the Bridge, the Cambridge University Centre for Music Performance's annual 'battle of the bands' competition, Finlay was particularly thrilled at the end of Lent Term to host a performance event with his band Quasar. This event, called Quasar & Friends, brought together around 25 musicians from a range of Cambridge-based bands and for Finlay testifies to the uniqueness of Cambridge as a place for pursuing one鈥檚 passions to the fullest.

He adds: 鈥淭hey went so above and beyond to do this thing just for the love it. Everyone was so busy and yet willing to drop everything to do that. It was so heartwarming. And there鈥檚 lots of support for it, and the facilities are great 鈥 I鈥檝e used the Ruth Mott Room, Caius鈥 practice room in Harvey Court, a stupid number of times. It鈥檚 one of the best in Cambridge, definitely!鈥

Although keeping his options open, following his PhD Finlay is particularly interested in applying his skills to green technology. 鈥淚 came across a role recently that made me realise the skills and tools we use can be used in the world of renewable energy policy,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hey do a similar thing where they take unstructured data from sources like government and industry reports, turn them into organised datasets and publish the tools that allow policymakers to use the data most effectively to make decisions. So there are roles out there that combine the tools from my research and this space, which I never really thought there were.鈥

3 minutes