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Prize Winner
Professor Daryl WilliamsFor the pioneering invention of the dynamic vapour sorption instrument, which has transformed research laboratory practise worldwide.
Prize Winner
Professor David ProcterFor the development of new methods in the synthesis and use of heterocycles in the areas of radical and organosulfur chemistry.
Prize Winner
Professor James McCuskerFor the combined application of synthesis and ultrafast spectroscopy to advance our understanding of the excited-state dynamics of transition metal complexes.
Prize Winner
Professor James TourFor innovations in materials chemistry, with applications in medicine and nanotechnology.
Prize Winner
Professor Leigh CanhamFor pioneering work in silicon quantum dots and contributions to practical applications of silicon nanostructures in the electronics, photonics and biomedical fields.
Prize Winner
Professor Melanie SanfordFor the development of catalytic C–H functionalization reactions and their applications in organic synthesis.
Prize Winner
Teri OdomFor seminal work on multi-scale materials that enable new ways to achieve ultrafast, coherent, and directional light emission at the nanoscale.
Prize Winner
Dr Andrew WilsonFor the development of uniquely nucleophilic hydrido- and organocalcium reagents.
Prize Winner
Dr Anna RegoutzFor outstanding contributions to the development and application of X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy in the area of electronic materials and devices.
Prize Winner
Dr Radha BoyaFor contributions to creating Angstrom-scale atomically smooth capillaries from two-dimensional materials and unravelling the properties of fluids under atomic-scale confinement.
Prize Winner
Dr Thomas BennettFor contributions to the non-crystalline metal-organic framework domain, including synthesis and characterization of the first liquid and glass MOF states.
Prize Winner
Professor Andrew BaldwinFor the development and application of chemical methods for understanding the biology of membraneless organelles.
Prize Winner
Cinzia CasiraghiFor the development of practical biocompatible inks made of 2D materials and their applications in the biomedical field and in printed electronics.
Prize Winner
Paul DysonFor major advances in the catalytic transformations of renewable substrates leading to industrial processes and products.
Prize Winner
Professor Rachel O'ReillyFor creative and comprehensive syntheses of functional, self-assembling polymeric materials.
Prize Winner
Professor Richard CatlowFor the development and application of computational methods in conjunction with experiment as powerful and predictive tools in the physical chemistry of solids.
Prize Winner
Professor Vernon GibsonFor seminal contributions to fundamental and applied inorganic chemistry, and for critical work in policy setting at the interface of academia with industry and government.
Prize Winner
Professor Christopher HunterFor pioneering a quantitative description of non-covalent interactions and establishing key principles in supramolecular design to create duplex-forming sequence oligomers and catalytic assemblies.
Prize Winner
Professor Edward TateFor contributions to discovery of novel chemical probes, and their application in opening up new understanding of protein modification in living systems, leading to the validation of novel drug targets in cancer and infectious disease.
Prize Winner
Professor Klaus MüllenFor developing novel nanomaterials for single-molecule applications, organic electronics, sensing, catalysis, bio-labelling and energy conversion.