Always patient, kind, and understanding.
Brings passion and energy to teaching.
Always fair, encouraging, and motivating.
Helps students see the value in learning.
Sina Jamali serves as a Senior Lecturer in Materials and Analytical Chemistry in the School of Environment and Science at Griffith University, where he leads the Electrobiomaterials Nexus (EBM Nexus) research group. This dynamic team is dedicated to advancing the fields of electrochemistry and biosensors through innovative research. As an Australian Research Council (ARC) Discovery Early Career Researcher Award (DECRA) Fellow, Jamali has secured prestigious funding under grant DE210101137 titled 'Exploiting biological noise for next generation electrochemical detection'. He holds a PhD from the University of Wollongong (2016) in the School of Mechanical, Materials, Mechatronic and Biomedical Engineering at the Intelligent Polymer Research Institute.
Jamali's research specializations include stochastic electrochemical data analysis, corrosion monitoring via electrochemical noise, mesoporous materials for biosensors, nano-architectured polymer films for ionic conduction, and biofouling-resistant coatings. His publications have garnered significant recognition in electrochemistry and materials science. Key works encompass 'Interpretation of stochastic electrochemical data' (2024, Current Opinion in Electrochemistry), 'Mesoporous Materials for Electrochemical Biosensors' (2025, Small), 'Bimodal Ionic Conduction through Polymer Films due to Nano-Architectures' (2025, Angewandte Chemie International Edition), 'Stochastic Electrochemical Measurement of a Biofouling-Resistant Zwitterionic Polymer Brush' (2024, Analytical Chemistry), 'Enhancing Sensitivity in Multitarget Biomolecule Detection via Engineered Reduced Graphene Oxide Sensors' (2026, ACS Applied Nano Materials), and the seminal review 'A critical review of electrochemical noise measurement as a tool for evaluation of organic coatings' (2016, Progress in Organic Coatings). Prior to Griffith, Jamali served as Research Fellow at UNSW Sydney and held research associate roles at University of Wollongong. He teaches chemistry courses such as 2502ESC, supervises PhD candidates, and manages equipment including the Nanoparticle Tracking Analysis system. His efforts support Sustainable Development Goals 7 and 11. Jamali earned the Bill Wheeler Award in 2013.
