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Prize Winner
Professor Mathew HorrocksFor the generation of single-molecule fluorescence microscopy approaches for visualising protein aggregates in neurodegenerative disease and protein-membrane disruption, and their application in drug discovery.
Prize Winner
Industrially Viable Solid State Lithium Metal BatteriesFor the development of an industrially scalable solid-state lithium metal battery architecture integrating nanocarbon-enhanced cathodes and solid electrolytes.
Prize Winner
Professor Ifan StephensFor pioneering contributions to non-aqueous electrochemistry, including the discovery of efficient systems for nitrogen reduction, and new characterisation techniques for probing gas evolution in batteries.
Prize Winner
Dr Rebecca GreenawayFor the development of streamlined high-throughput automated workflows for the accelerated discovery of supramolecular and porous materials, and for the realisation and development of different types of porous liquids.
Prize Winner
Dr Muthiah ManoharanFor pioneering discoveries in nucleic acid chemistry and for contributions to human health through the discoveries of RNA-based medicines.
Prize Winner
Dr Mélanie Roffet-SalqueFor the development and application of biomolecular and isotope techniques to organic residues preserved in archaeological and historical artefacts.
Prize Winner
Professor Helen HailesFor the design of innovative biocatalytic and chemoenzymatic strategies for molecular assembly, and the enzymatic upcycling of waste biomass and breakdown of plastics.
Prize Winner
Dr Lucia BurgioFor the application of analytical chemistry to cultural heritage research, including the discovery of new historic pigments and the development of Raman reference datasets.
Prize Winner
Professor John SpencerFor pioneering organic chemistry used to accelerate drug discovery and underpin the development of clinical candidates.
Prize Winner
Edward Pyzer-KnappFor uniting chemistry, physics and artificial intelligence into a powerful new approach for molecular discovery and innovation.
Prize Winner
Professor Matthias DriessFor creativity in organometallic and materials chemistry, particularly the synthesis of new classes of silicon-based catalysts and advanced energy materials, and for excellence in communication.
Prize Winner
Federico RoseiFor outstanding contributions to the design, synthesis and characterization of nanomaterials with applications in renewable energy, and for excellence in communication.
Prize Winner
Dr Alex GanoseFor the development and application of innovative computational methods to predict the properties of semiconductors for applications in energy technologies.
Prize Winner
Professor Peter SlaterFor the development of new solid-state materials, fundamental structure–property understanding, and innovative synthesis routes underpinning energy storage and energy generation technologies.
Prize Winner
Professor Yimon AyeFor pioneering contributions in the development of live-cell-based tools able to elucidate, reprogramme, and chemically manipulate biological signalling mechanisms.
Prize Winner
Hugo BronsteinFor the design, synthesis and understanding of functional organic materials with precisely controlled excited states.
Prize Winner
Dr Roly ArmstrongFor work on stereochemistry in multi-component reactions and organo-alkali metal chemistry.
Prize Winner
Dr Josh AbbensethFor advancing the chemistry of geometrically constrained heavy pnictogen pincer compounds to access exotic radical states and unique transition metal mimetic reaction pathways.
Prize Winner
Fluorine Circularity TeamFor pioneering mechanochemical and room-temperature strategies to defluorinate and upcycle fluoropolymers and PFAS into valuable fluorochemicals, enabling sustainable fluorine recycling.
Prize Winner
Dr Joseph ParrFor advances in alkaline-earth metal chemistry, including the synthesis of unprecedented metal-alkane and metal-formyl complexes, and C–F and C–C bond activation.