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Prize Winner
Particle Characterisation GroupFor proactively engaging technicians through an inclusive programme at their FORGE 2024 conference.
Prize Winner
UKRI Interdisciplinary Centre for Circular Chemical EconomyFor advancing circular economy solutions for the UK chemical industry through chemical recycling, biomass conversion and direct carbon dioxide reduction.
Prize Winner
Dr Pietro SormanniFor pioneering the development of computational methods for antibody design and optimisation, enabling transformative advances in biomedical research and therapeutic antibody engineering.
Prize Winner
Professor Zoë WallerFor contributions to our understanding of nucleic acid i-motif structure and function in a cellular context using chemical tools and structural methods to unveil new therapeutic opportunities.
Prize Winner
Professor Ali TavassoliFor the high-throughput intracellular production and screening of cyclic peptide libraries, and their application in the identification of inhibitors of protein–protein interactions.
Prize Winner
Dr Graeme TurnbullFor outstanding service to the Royal Society of Chemistry through our member communities and governance groups, in particular supporting the Analytical Science Community through local and national activities.
Prize Winner
Dr Mattia SilviFor the development of creative synthetic strategies through the design of novel radical acceptors.
Prize Winner
Dr James RedmanFor outstanding service to the Royal Society of Chemistry through the Chemical Biology and Bioorganic Group and the South East Wales Local Section.
Prize Winner
Professor Franziska SchoenebeckFor highly innovative advances to metal-catalysed coupling reactions, combining cutting-edge synthetic organic chemistry with state-of-the-art computational and mechanistic studies.
Prize Winner
Professor K. Clive ThompsonFor outstanding service to the Royal Society of Chemistry through the Water Science Forum and the Food Group.
Prize Winner
Multidimensional Click ChemistryFor the development of multidimensional click chemistry, a next-generation click-technology that extends bond creation into the three-dimensional world, opening doors to new frontiers in biomedicine, materials science, and beyond.
Prize Winner
We are Chemistry (WaC)For the development of an impactful integrated engagement programme transforming student success through building equitable, inclusive networks, empowering underrepresented groups, and establishing sector-leading practices in student partnership.
Prize Winner
Uncovering the hidden paths in C–H activation catalysisFor the development of a unique approach for directly observing transient species and key bond-forming steps that underpin transition metal-catalysed C–H activation and functionalisation reactions.
Prize Winner
Georgia WignallFor outstanding contributions to the oligonucleotide platform, enabling more efficient process development, and championing a positive inclusive culture within the workplace.
Prize Winner
Professor Paul WaltonFor exemplary and wide-ranging contributions over two decades promoting the use of evidence-based thinking in gender equality in the chemical sciences.
Prize Winner
Dr Jack WoolleyFor providing outstanding technical and scientific support to users of the Warwick Centre for Ultrafast Spectroscopy, enabling many researchers to conduct impactful science.
Prize Winner
Great Science Share for SchoolsFor inspiring 5-14 years olds in practical science, through a collaborative campaign focused on pupils asking,investigating and sharing their scientific questions, supported by teacher CPD.
Prize Winner
NoseToDiagnoseFor a novel approach to early Parkinson’s disease diagnosis and stratification using a simple non-invasive skin swab.
Prize Winner
DMF-NMR developmentFor the development of Digital Microfluidics-Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (DMF-NMR) technology for enhanced chemical analysis.
Prize Winner
PericyclasesFor the discovery of a new class of enzymes, the pericyclases, that catalyse reactions in biosynthesis of complex natural products, and for identifying their mechanisms.