The Faraday Lectureship Prize, previously known simply as the Faraday Lectureship, is awarded once every two years (approximately) by the Royal Society of Chemistry for "exceptional contributions to physical or theoretical chemistry".[1] Named after Michael Faraday, the first Faraday Lecture was given in 1869, two years after Faraday's death, by Jean-Baptiste Dumas.[2] As of 2009, the prize was worth £5000, with the recipient also receiving a medal and a certificate.[1] As the name suggests, the recipient also gives a public lecture describing his or her work.
Winners
Source: RSC
- 1869Jean-Baptiste Dumas :
- 1872Stanislao Cannizzaro :
- 1875August Wilhelm von Hofmann :
- 1879Charles-Adolphe Wurtz :
- 1881Hermann von Helmholtz :
- 1889Dmitri Mendeleev :
- 1895John Strutt, 3rd Baron Rayleigh :
- 1904Wilhelm Ostwald :
- 1911Theodore William Richards :
- 1907Hermann Emil Fischer :
- 1914Svante Arrhenius :
- 1924Robert Andrews Millikan :
- 1927Richard Willstätter :
- 1930Niels Bohr :
- 1933Peter Debye :
- 1936Lord Rutherford of Nelson :
- 1939Irving Langmuir :
- 1947Sir Robert Robinson :
- 1950George de Hevesy :
- 1953Sir Cyril Hinshelwood :
- 1956Otto Hahn :
- 1958Leopold Ružička :
- 1961Sir Christopher Ingold :
- 1965Ronald George Wreyford Norrish :
- 1968Charles Coulson :
- 1970Gerhard Herzberg :
- 1974Sir Frederick Dainton :
- 1977Manfred Eigen :
- 1980Sir George Porter :
- 1983John Shipley Rowlinson :
- 1986Alan Carrington :
- 1989John Meurig Thomas :
- 1992Yuan T. Lee :
- 1995William Klemperer :
- 1998A. David Buckingham :
- 2001Richard Zare :
- 2004Alexander Pines :
- 2007Gerhard Ertl :
- 2010John Polanyi :
- 2012Richard Saykally :
- 2014Michel Che :
- 2016Graham Fleming : [3]
- 2018Graham Hutchings :
- 2020Richard Catlow :
- 2021Laura Gagliardi :
- 2022Michael Wasielewski :
See also
References
- 1 2 Faraday Lectureship Prize, Royal Society of Chemistry, retrieved 5 March 2010.
- ↑ Faraday Lectureship Winners, Royal Society of Chemistry, retrieved 5 March 2010.
- ↑ "Faraday Lectureship Prize 2016 Winner". Royal Society of Chemistry. Retrieved 4 September 2016.
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.