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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
Professor Christopher HardacreFor outstanding contributions to the areas of liquid and gas phase heterogeneous catalysis.
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 Chris WillisFor outstanding contributions across the broad spectrum of natural product chemistry.
Prize Winner
Professor Dame Margaret BrimbleFor a large body of pioneering work spanning the fields of natural product synthesis, peptide chemistry, and medicinal chemistry.
Prize Winner
Craig BanksFor outstanding contributions to electrochemistry through pioneering additive manufacturing.
Prize Winner
Professor Darren DixonFor the discovery, development and applications of iridium-catalysed reductive functionalisation of amides and lactams.
Prize Winner
Keary Engle and Garret MiyakeJoint winners 2025: For pioneering contributions in their respective research areas
Prize Winner
Professor David K SmithFor pioneering an understanding of molecular materials based on supramolecular gels.
Prize Winner
Professor Daryl WilliamsFor the pioneering invention of the dynamic vapour sorption instrument, which has transformed research laboratory practise worldwide.
Prize Winner
Professor Eduardo PerisFor the application of creative thinking in approaching fundamental challenges in organometallic chemistry and catalysis.
Prize Winner
Professor Doug StephanFor the discovery of “Frustrated Lewis Pairs” and their wide applicability in bond-forming and catalysis, and for excellence in communication.
Prize Winner
Professor Edward AndersonFor creative contributions to organic synthesis and synthetic methodology.
Prize Winner
Professor Dermot O'HareFor pioneering new concepts in materials chemistry, catalysis, and nanomaterials and promoting their application and commercialisation in sustainable technologies.
Prize Winner
Professor David EvansFor outstanding service to the Å·ÃÀAV through the activities of our inorganic and biochemical member-led communities.
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 Enrique IglesiaFor outstanding contributions to the mechanistic understanding of catalysis, leading scientific innovation for environmental protection and the production of energy carriers, fuels, and chemicals.
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 Eric AnslynFor exploiting supramolecular interactions and dynamic covalent bonding to generate assays of practical utility, and for communicating the excitement of chemistry to students of all ages.