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Dr Heather Shewan
Dr

Heather Shewan

Email: 
Phone: 
+61 7 336 54920

Overview

Background

Heather attained her Bachelor of Technology degree in food engineering from Massey University. She then spent 10 years in gelatine manufacture in various roles including quality assurance, production management and process improvement engineering. In 2015 she completed her PhD study into the rheology of biopolymer soft particle suspensions, supervised by Professor Jason Stokes at the University of Queensland. She has since continued at UQ in postdoctoral roles investigating the relationship between rheological properties, food structure and sensory perception of real food products and model soft particle suspensions with a focus on dairy protein systems. The key outcomes from the project have allowed our industry partner to move towards the rational design of food products.

Availability

Dr Heather Shewan is:
Not available for supervision
Media expert

Qualifications

  • Doctor of Philosophy, The University of Queensland

Research impacts

Over the past 10 years, Heather has developed knowledge of the relationship between food and ingredient structure and physical properties focused on dairy and other protein systems. This structure-property relationship has been evaluated for protein-based systems at surfaces, during confinement and in bulk systems. She has been part of a team developing a new rheological method to measure and interpret rheological behaviour of suspensions where the gap between rubbing surfaces is of the same order of magnitude as the particle diameter. Under these conditions, suspension rheology is a function of particle micromechanics. She has used model systems of polysaccharide particles to develop the relationship between particle and suspension microstructure, narrow gap rheology, tribology and sensory for non-interacting particles. The key outcomes from the project have allowed our long-term industry partner to move towards rational design of food products. Heather is now a senior research Fellow under Australia's Food and Beverage Accelerator and will continue to work on structure-property relationships for a range of protein-based foods including gelatine, dairy and plant protein based foods.

Works

Search Professor Heather Shewan’s works on UQ eSpace

33 works between 2012 and 2024

21 - 33 of 33 works

2020

Journal Article

Ability to detect and identify the presence of particles influences consumer acceptance of yoghurt

Olarte Mantilla, Sandra M., Shewan, Heather M., Shingleton, Rebecca, Stokes, Jason R. and Smyth, Heather E. (2020). Ability to detect and identify the presence of particles influences consumer acceptance of yoghurt. Food Quality and Preference, 85 103979, 103979. doi: 10.1016/j.foodqual.2020.103979

Ability to detect and identify the presence of particles influences consumer acceptance of yoghurt

2020

Journal Article

Influence of particle modulus (softness) and matrix rheology on the sensory experience of ‘grittiness’ and ‘smoothness’

Shewan, Heather M., Stokes, Jason R. and Smyth, Heather E. (2020). Influence of particle modulus (softness) and matrix rheology on the sensory experience of ‘grittiness’ and ‘smoothness’. Food Hydrocolloids, 103 105662, 105662. doi: 10.1016/j.foodhyd.2020.105662

Influence of particle modulus (softness) and matrix rheology on the sensory experience of ‘grittiness’ and ‘smoothness’

2020

Book Chapter

Food structure development for rheological/tribological performance

Shewan, H. M. and Stokes, J. R. (2020). Food structure development for rheological/tribological performance. Handbook of food structure development. (pp. 175-198) edited by Fotis Spyropoulos, Aris Lazidis and Ian Norton. Cambridge, United Kingdom: Royal Society of Chemistry. doi: 10.1039/9781788016155-00173

Food structure development for rheological/tribological performance

2019

Journal Article

Assessing the effect of aromatic residues placement on α-helical peptide structure and nanofibril formation of 21-mer peptides

Solemanifar, Armin, Nguyen, Tuan A.H., Laycock, Bronwyn, Shewan, Heather Margaret, Donose, Bogdan Constantin and Creasey, Rhiannon C. G. (2019). Assessing the effect of aromatic residues placement on α-helical peptide structure and nanofibril formation of 21-mer peptides. Molecular Systems Design and Engineering, 5 (2), 521-531. doi: 10.1039/c9me00082h

Assessing the effect of aromatic residues placement on α-helical peptide structure and nanofibril formation of 21-mer peptides

2019

Journal Article

Tribology and its growing use towards the study of food oral processing and sensory perception

Shewan, Heather M., Pradal, Clementine and Stokes, Jason R. (2019). Tribology and its growing use towards the study of food oral processing and sensory perception. Journal of Texture Studies, 51 (1) jtxs.12452, 7-22. doi: 10.1111/jtxs.12452

Tribology and its growing use towards the study of food oral processing and sensory perception

2018

Conference Publication

Using model soft particles to define a structure-function relationship applicable to semi-solid foods

Shewan, Heather and Smyth, Heather Eunice (2018). Using model soft particles to define a structure-function relationship applicable to semi-solid foods. 12th Australian and New Zealand Sensory and Consumer Science Symposium, Brisbane, QLD Australia, 5-7 February 2018.

Using model soft particles to define a structure-function relationship applicable to semi-solid foods

2017

Journal Article

Particle-wall tribology of slippery hydrogel particle suspensions

Shewan, Heather M., Stokes, Jason R. and Cloitre, Michel (2017). Particle-wall tribology of slippery hydrogel particle suspensions. Soft Matter, 13 (10), 2099-2106. doi: 10.1039/c6sm01775d

Particle-wall tribology of slippery hydrogel particle suspensions

2015

Journal Article

Illustrating ultra-low-volume rheology on a conventional rheometer: Charting the development of hyaluronan during fermentation

Boehm, Michael W., Shewan, Heather M., Steen, Jennifer A. and Stokes, Jason R. (2015). Illustrating ultra-low-volume rheology on a conventional rheometer: Charting the development of hyaluronan during fermentation. Applied Rheology, 25 (55609), 12-19. doi: 10.3933/APPLRHEOL-25-55609

Illustrating ultra-low-volume rheology on a conventional rheometer: Charting the development of hyaluronan during fermentation

2015

Journal Article

Analytically predicting the viscosity of hard sphere suspensions from the particle size distribution

Shewan, Heather M. and Stokes, Jason R. (2015). Analytically predicting the viscosity of hard sphere suspensions from the particle size distribution. Journal of Non-Newtonian Fluid Mechanics, 222, 72-81. doi: 10.1016/j.jnnfm.2014.09.002

Analytically predicting the viscosity of hard sphere suspensions from the particle size distribution

2015

Other Outputs

Rheology of soft particle suspensions

Shewan, Heather (2015). Rheology of soft particle suspensions. PhD Thesis, School of Chemical Engineering, The University of Queensland. doi: 10.14264/uql.2015.533

Rheology of soft particle suspensions

2015

Journal Article

Viscosity of soft spherical micro-hydrogel suspensions

Shewan, Heather M. and Stokes, Jason R. (2015). Viscosity of soft spherical micro-hydrogel suspensions. Journal of Colloid and Interface Science, 442, 75-81. doi: 10.1016/j.jcis.2014.11.064

Viscosity of soft spherical micro-hydrogel suspensions

2013

Journal Article

Review of techniques to manufacture micro-hydrogel particles for the food industry and their applications

Shewan, Heather M. and Stokes, Jason R. (2013). Review of techniques to manufacture micro-hydrogel particles for the food industry and their applications. Journal of Food Engineering, 119 (4), 781-792. doi: 10.1016/j.jfoodeng.2013.06.046

Review of techniques to manufacture micro-hydrogel particles for the food industry and their applications

2012

Conference Publication

Biopolymer microgel suspension rheology as a function of particle modulus and effective phase volume

Shewan, H. M. and Stokes, J. R. (2012). Biopolymer microgel suspension rheology as a function of particle modulus and effective phase volume. 16th Gums and Stabilisers for the Food Industry Conference, Wageningen, Netherlands, 28 June -1 July 2011. Cambridge, United Kingdom: Royal Society of Chemistry. doi: 10.1039/9781849734554-00165

Biopolymer microgel suspension rheology as a function of particle modulus and effective phase volume

Funding

Past funding

  • 2020 - 2022
    Developing an antiviral surface cleaner utilising unique surface adsorption properties of gelatine-hydrolysate
    Advance Queensland Industry Research Fellowships
    Open grant
  • 2019 - 2022
    Emulsion gels and sensory perception
    Fonterra Co-operative Group Limited
    Open grant
  • 2019
    Advanced Nanoparticle, Colloid and Microparticle Characterisation and Precision Engineering Nanosystems Facility
    UQ Major Equipment and Infrastructure
    Open grant
  • 2019
    Development of Lipid-coated Microgels as a Fat-mimetic with Superior Sensory Properties
    UQ Early Career Researcher
    Open grant

Supervision

Availability

Dr Heather Shewan is:
Not available for supervision

Supervision history

Current supervision

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Structuring of plant-based emulsions

    Principal Advisor

    Other advisors: Professor Jason Stokes

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Understanding the relationship between the shape, size and local density of food gels and their functionality in vitro

    Associate Advisor

    Other advisors: Dr Bernadine Flanagan, Dr Deirdre Mikkelsen, Professor Mike Gidley

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Development of multi-colour neurosurgical training models with realistic haptic qualities through additive manufacturing technologies

    Associate Advisor

    Other advisors: Dr Luigi Vandi

Completed supervision

Media

Enquiries

Contact Dr Heather Shewan directly for media enquiries about:

  • Food Structure
  • food texture
  • hydrocolloid
  • mouthfeel
  • Rheology
  • saliva

Need help?

For help with finding experts, story ideas and media enquiries, contact our Media team:

communications@uq.edu.au