The FIFRELIN code (FIssion FRagment Evaporation modeLINg), developed since 2009 at the CEA, simulates the formation and decay of nuclear fission fragments. It contributes to the enrichment of the European nuclear data library JEFF, which is used for reactor simulations. The calculation proceeds in two steps: the generation of fission fragments (with their physical properties), followed by their decay using a Monte Carlo Hauser-Feshbach approach. At the moment of scission into two fragments, the total energy is split between kinetic energy (TKE) and excitation energy (TXE). The TXE is further divided into deformation energy and intrinsic excitation energy, which govern the emission of neutrons and photons. Accurate knowledge of both TXE and TKE is essential to improve FIFRELIN’s performance. Microscopic theoretical approaches (such as Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov and the Generator Coordinate Method) are used and developed within DES to provide theoretical input supporting evaluated nuclear data. This postdoctoral position aims to use and enhance these models to gain a more detailed understanding of nuclear properties at scission. The desired candidate has several years of experience (3 years or more) in nuclear mean-field theory (such as Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov, relativistic mean-field, etc.) or in the generator coordinate method.