Dr
Asad JamalProfile page
Department of Mechanical Engineering - Faculty of Engineering
Orcid identifier0000-0002-6018-7298
- Department of Mechanical Engineering - Faculty of Engineering
- City and Guilds Building, South Kensington Campus, United Kingdom
BIO
Dr Asad Jamal obtained his PhD from the Institute of Physics, University of Freiburg, Germany in September 2016. As an experimental physicist, he studied the phenomenon of self‐assembly of achiral organic molecules into ordered nanostructures via tuning the interplay of specific intermolecular interactions in a German‐French collaborative project within the framework of the International Research Training Group (IRTG) “Soft Matter Science”.
In March 2017, he joined the Tribology group at Imperial College London as postdoctoral researcher. From March 2017 to February 2019, he done a research project in collaboration with a European industrial partner, Oleon, to explore the basic mechanism of commonly used organic corrosion inhibitors and their potential effectiveness as friction modifiers.
In March 2019 he joined the EDEN 2020 project where his research focus is on the mechanical properties of cerebral white matter, biomechanical aspects of infusion-based drug delivery and the associated molecular processes.
Main Research Topics: localised drug delivery, microscale tissue mechanics, organic thin films, ordered nanostructures.
Featured Stories: Direction of needle penetration in brain affects drug uptake, finds new study
ResearchGate
LinkedIn
In March 2017, he joined the Tribology group at Imperial College London as postdoctoral researcher. From March 2017 to February 2019, he done a research project in collaboration with a European industrial partner, Oleon, to explore the basic mechanism of commonly used organic corrosion inhibitors and their potential effectiveness as friction modifiers.
In March 2019 he joined the EDEN 2020 project where his research focus is on the mechanical properties of cerebral white matter, biomechanical aspects of infusion-based drug delivery and the associated molecular processes.
Main Research Topics: localised drug delivery, microscale tissue mechanics, organic thin films, ordered nanostructures.
Featured Stories: Direction of needle penetration in brain affects drug uptake, finds new study
ResearchGate
DEGREES
- PhDUniversity of Freiburg, Freiburg, 79104, Germany
FACULTY
- Faculty of Engineering