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Prize Winner
Plymouth Science CICFor creating innovative teaching resources that enable children to work scientifically and demonstrate their skills and creativity through a hands-on approach.
Prize Winner
University of Surrey Chemical Pilot Plant Education and T...For the development of an integrated training facility for chemists and chemical engineers in large-scale chemical processes, through a combination of realistic and immersive virtual reality simulations and hands-on practical plant work.
Prize Winner
The Rare Earth Elements ProjectFor convening collaborators from chemistry, history, and fine art to engage and educate diverse audiences about the separation of critical metals and the impacts of current production methods.
Prize Winner
Stride, Inc.For the development of Atomic Rescue, a chemistry game in Minecraft, that has taught basic chemistry to over 10,000 students.
Prize Winner
Professor Steven BellFor pioneering work in developing Raman and surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) for quantitative chemical analysis.
Prize Winner
Professor Bruce TurnbullFor the development and application of bioorthogonal approaches in engineering functional protein and carbohydrate based systems.
Prize Winner
Robert HoyeFor pioneering, interdisciplinary contributions to the discovery, understanding and manufacture of defect-tolerant semiconductors for energy conversion and healthcare applications.
Prize Winner
Luisa De ColaFor innovative studies on how photophysically active materials and nanostructures may be fabricated for deployment within active biological systems targeting future healthcare solutions, and for excellence in communication.
Prize Winner
Nicholas KotovFor innovative studies and applications of complex self-assembling nanosystems, and for excellence in communication.
Prize Winner
Xiaogang LiuFor outstanding contributions to the understanding and optical manipulation of photon conversion in nanocrystals and their applications in X-ray and light-field imaging, and for excellence in communication.
Prize Winner
Professor Angela RussellFor innovation in medicinal chemistry leading to the identification of first in class utrophin modulators for the treatment of Duchenne muscular dystrophy.
Prize Winner
Gonçalo BernardesFor the design, development and application of targeted therapeutics including small molecule-based RNA degradation and conditional activation of chemotherapeutics.
Prize Winner
Matthew GibsonFor transformative contributions in polymer and biomaterials science, particularly for the development of materials to stabilise biologics.
Prize Winner
Marina KuimovaFor the development of unique probes and methodologies in fluorescence imaging leading to an understanding of dynamic biological processes in living systems, pertinent to health and disease.
Prize Winner
Professor Michael InglesonFor new approaches to C–H borylation using zinc catalysts and bis-borane electrophiles.
Prize Winner
Professor Euan BrechinFor outstanding contributions to synthetic coordination chemistry and molecular magnetism.
Prize Winner
Professor Matthew RigbyFor research on the abundances and fluxes of environmentally harmful gases in the atmosphere, which has contributed to a measurable reduction in emissions of climate forcing and ozone depleting gases.
Prize Winner
Professor Jason HallettFor pioneering work on the development of ionic liquids as commercially relevant solvents in biorefining and the circular economy.
Prize Winner
Professor Reinhard MaurerFor contributions to the fundamental understanding of molecular structure and chemical dynamics at hybrid organic-inorganic interfaces through the development of computational simulation methods.
Prize Winner
Professor Scott HabershonFor the development of innovative computational simulation methods to predict molecular dynamics across the timescales of chemistry.