Researcher biography

Jason Stokes is a Professor in the School of Chemical Engineering and leads the Premium Food and Beverages Program in Australia's Food and Beverage Accelerator. This program focuses on industry-driven research to enhance onshore value-adding and business growth opportunities.

Jason is a recognized expert in the rheology, lubrication, structure and processing of complex fluids and soft material, including food and beverages. He pioneered the development of rheology and soft contact tribology techniques to provide new insights into oral processing and sensory perception that includes mouthfeel, taste and flavour. His research has uncovered the physical and structural properties driving the complex sensory attributes of a wide variety of food and beverages. These are used by industry to engineer next-generation foods with improved quality and sustainability.

Jason served in a leadership role as Deputy Associate Dean Research (ADR) in the Faculty of EAIT (2020-23), with a specific focus on research training, development and well-being of emerging researchers. He was previously acting ADR in Faculty of EAIT and Director of Research in the School of Chemical Engineering. Prior to joining UQ in 2008, Jason spent a decade as a research scientist at Unilever's Corporate Research Laboratory in the UK.

Research Focus:

  • Rheology, tribology, and interfacial properties of soft matter, food and beverages.
  • Soft matter such as gels, soft glasses, suspensions, microgels, emulsions, and foams.
  • Colloids and hydrocolloids such as nanocrystalline cellulose, microgels, polysaccharides, proteins, and starches.
  • Development of structure-property-processing relationships for rational design of food and beverages, including dairy and plant-based.
  • Aqueous lubrication, transport phenomena and flow of non-Newtonian fluids and their application across various industries (minerals, waste, foods, firefighting fluids, polishing fluids).