
Intern - Mechanical Design & Simulation with AI-assisted Workflows
Required skills
Job description
Huawei published this listing. We've added our own working-student context below — what this role means for your weekly hours, take-home pay and student visa as a student in Nuremberg, Germany.
Description provided by Huawei
Huawei Digital Power is a business unit within Huawei that provides Enterprise & Industry customers, products and solutions like clean power generation, transportation electrification, site power facilities, data center facilities, and embedded power. Huawei Digital Power is committed to integrate Digital and Power Electronics technologies to provide customers with high-quality, energy-efficient, green, and low-carbon power electronics products, facilitating their business success.
The Huawei Automotive Electric Control Technology Laboratory will play an important role in the Huawei Digital Power Business Unit in the advanced electric drive control, architectural development, design, and strategic engineering of automotive applications such as drivetrain, DC-AC inverter, and fusion driving component, advanced AI/cloud technology, etc. As an employee you will be part of the HUAWEI Automotive R&D Competence Center in Nuremberg.
Join us as a
Intern - Mechanical Design & Simulation with AI-assisted Workflows (m/f/d)
Your mission
- You will be part of the R&D team and support ongoing projects in the mechanical automotive field with the opportunity to gain insight into the transmission system
- Modify in 3D CAD models and perform structural element analyses to evaluate the performance of mechanical and electromechanical components
- Interpret simulation results in collaboration with senior research engineers to derive concrete design recommendations
- Design and implement structured document-based workflows using locally hosted AI software
- Documentation of own work and supporting team reports
- Enrolled Master’s student in Automotive Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Mechatronics, Computational Engineering, or a comparable discipline
- Solid foundational knowledge of automotive mechanics combined with the ability to rapidly master new technologies
- Knowledge in Chassis or Transmission Systems is highly advantageous
- Solid hands-on experience with CAD software for 3D component modelling and assembly design
- Keen interest in building and operating automated workflows using locally hosted AI software
- High level of motivation and self-reliance working style and willingness to learn and quickly adapt to new topics
Your rewards of working here
- Our culture is characterized by innovative power and team spirit as well as the intensive exchange of knowledge and experience within our global network.
- We offer healthy meals ranging from traditional Chinese to western delicacies in our famous company canteen.
- To keep your development ongoing, you will find a broad range of training opportunities. Many online and face-to-face training programs incl. language courses in German and Mandarin.
- Our diverse and welcoming environment is shaped by different backgrounds and around 40 individual nationalities.
- Self-responsible work in a competent, motivated and constantly growing team.
Huawei is a leading global information and communications technology (ICT) solutions provider. Our ICT solutions, products and services are used in more than 170 countries and regions, serving over one-third of the world's population. With 197,000 employees, Huawei is committed to develop the future information society and build a Better Connected World.
Working student essentials
What this Engineering internship in Nuremberg means for you — pay rules, social contributions, and what international students should check before applying.
Weekly hours
Internships have no 20-hour cap, but a voluntary internship longer than three months generally has to pay at least the German minimum wage. Mandatory internships in your study programme are exempt.
Working student rulesSocial contributions
Mandatory internships are largely exempt from social contributions. Voluntary internships are treated like regular employment once they run long enough, so contributions usually apply.
Check your insuranceInternational students
Non-EU students can work 140 full or 280 half days per year (raised from 120/240 in March 2024). A working student contract usually fits within this — confirm the exact limits printed on your residence permit.
Studying in Germany