Search results
Prize Winner
The DISTINCTIVE ConsortiumFor the delivery of research that addressed challenges associated with the continuing safe storage and disposal of radioactive legacy nuclear waste.
Prize Winner
Professor Karen FauldsFor contributions to the field of surface enhanced spatially offset Raman scattering (SESORRS).
Prize Winner
Professor Michael AshfoldFor outstanding service to the Royal Society of Chemistry through our member communities and governance groups.
Prize Winner
Professor Geoffrey MaitlandFor outstanding service to the Royal Society of Chemistry through our publishing activities and governance groups.
Prize Winner
Professor Alison HulmeFor outstanding service to the Royal Society of Chemistry and the organic chemistry community through our member communities and governance groups.
Prize Winner
Jean-Luc BrédasFor seminal contributions to our fundamental understanding of the electronic properties of organic materials for electronics and photonics, and for excellence in communication.
Prize Winner
Carmen GalanFor the development of bioinspired and transformative synthetic probes and their application to the targeting and regulation of cellular processes in both mammalian and plant cells.
Prize Winner
Matthew FuchterFor the development of chemistry-led approaches to interrogate function in chemistry, materials and medicine.
Prize Winner
Junwang TangFor the discovery of efficient photocatalysts for clean and renewable fuel synthesis.
Prize Winner
Professor Jan VerletFor pioneering contributions to the spectroscopy and dynamics of anions in the gas-phase and at aqueous interfaces.
Prize Winner
Holger BraunschweigFor contributions to the chemistry of reactive low-oxidation-state main-group molecules, including their applications in catalysis.
Prize Winner
Emma KendrickFor discoveries and innovation in materials, manufacturing and recycling of lithium- and sodium-ion batteries.
Prize Winner
Chunying ChenFor pioneering contributions in exploration of the nano–bio interface, providing fundamental insights into the fate of nanomaterials in biota and the environment.
Prize Winner
Professor Sharon AshbrookFor exploiting multinuclear NMR spectroscopy, combined with first-principles calculations, to probe local structure and chemical reactivity in inorganic materials.
Prize Winner
Laura GagliardiFor contributions to the development of multireference quantum chemical approaches to describe catalysis and excited state phenomena.
Prize Winner
Professor Fernanda DuarteFor introducing multidisciplinary approaches to rationalise complex (bio)chemical reaction mechanisms, guiding rational molecular design.
Prize Winner
Professor Eleanor SchofieldFor contributions to understanding degradation processes in archaeological materials, cultural heritage science and conservation.
Prize Winner
Chad MirkinFor contributions to supramolecular chemistry and nanoscience, in particular the invention and development of methods for nanolithography, high-area rapid printing, and photocontrol in nanoparticle synthesis.