Corday-Morgan Prize
Corday-Morgan Medal and Prize | |
---|---|
The obverse of a Corday Morgan medal awarded in the early 2000s. The crab on the medal is a reference to Morgan's work on the chelate effect | |
Awarded for | The most meritorious contributions to chemistry |
Sponsored by | Royal Society of Chemistry |
Date | 1949 (1949) |
Reward(s) | £5000 |
Website | rsc.org/ScienceAndTechnology/Awards/CordayMorganPrizes |
The Corday–Morgan Medal and Prize is awarded by the Royal Society of Chemistry for the most meritorious contributions to experimental chemistry, including computer simulation.[1] The prize was established by chemist Gilbert Morgan, who named it after his father Thomas Morgan and his mother Mary-Louise Corday.[1] From the award's inception in 1949 until 1980 it was awarded by the Chemical Society.[citation needed] Up to three prizes are awarded annually.[1]
Recipients
The Corday–Morgan medallists have included many of the UK's most successful chemists. Since 1949 they have been:[2]
- 2018: Erwin Reisner [3], Oren Scherman [4], Magdalena Titirici[5]
- 2017 (2017): Andrew Goodwin , Eva Hevia, Tuomas Knowles
2016 (2016): Ian Fairlamb , Angelos Michaelides , Charlotte Williams[6]
2015 (2015): Sharon Ashbrook, Andrei Khlobystov , Dr. Sara A., Stephen Liddle[7]
2014 (2014): Milo Shaffer , David Spring , Molly Stevens[8]- 2013 (2013): Matthew Gaunt , Martin Heeney , Jonathan Reid
- 2012 (2012): Polly Arnold, Leroy Cronin, David K. Smith
- 2011 (2011): Michaele Hardie, Frederick R. Manby , Jonathan Nitschke
- 2010 (2010): Euan Brechin , Jason W. Chin , Jonathan Steed
- 2009 (2009): Andrew de Mello, Duncan Graham , Andrew Cooper
- 2008 (2008): Stephen Faulkner , Adam Nelson , David Tozer
- 2006 (2006): Neil R. Champness , Timothy J. Donohoe , Jeremy N. Harvey
- 2005 (2005): Benjamin G. Davis, Helen H. Fielding, Philip A. Gale
- 2004 (2004): Stuart C. Althorpe , David MacMillan, Jim Naismith
- 2003 (2003): Jonathan Clayden, Michael W. George, Guy Lloyd-Jones
- 2002 (2002): Alan Armstrong , Shankar Balasubramanian, Russell E. Morris, Stephen D. Price
- 2001 (2001): Harry Anderson, Gideon Davies, Steven M. Howdle , Patrick Unwin
- 2000 (2000): Colin D. Bain , Matthew Rosseinsky, Jonathan M. J. Williams
- 1999 (1999): Kenneth David Maclean Harris , Christopher A. Hunter, Michael D. War
- 1998 (1998): Varinder Aggarwal, J. Paul Attfield, Donald Craig
- 1997 (1997): Ian Manners , David E. Manolopoulos , Dermot O'Hare
- 1996 (1996): Duncan Bruce , Mark J. Hampden-Smith, Nicholas J. Turner
- 1995 (1995): Andrew R. Barron, Jeremy G. Frey , Gerard Parkin
- 1993 (1993) – 1994 (1994): Vernon C. Gibson, Nigel Simon Simpkins , Timothy Softley
- 1992 (1992): Paul D. Beer , Timothy C. Gallagher , David Edwin Logan
- 1991 (1991): David Gani , Jeremy Hutson, Stephen Mann
- 1990 (1990): David Crich, Patrick Fowler , Ian P. Rothwell
- 1989 (1989): Michael Ashfold, David Clary, Martin Schröder
- 1988 (1988): Geoffrey Cloke, Gareth A. Morris, Peter J. Sarre , Stephen G. Withers
- 1987 (1987): John M. Newsam, A. Guy Orpen , David Parker
- 1986 (1986): Anthony Barrett, George Christou, Paul R. Raithby
- 1985 (1985): William Clegg , Peter Edwards, Christopher J. Moody
- 1984 (1984): N. John Cooper , Stephen G. Davies, Anthony Harriman
- 1983 (1983): David J. Cole-Hamilton , W Jones, William B. Motherwell
- 1982 (1982): Anthony Cheetham, Robert H. Crabtree, Tom Simpson
- 1981 (1981): Christopher M. Dobson, Brian J. Howard, David A. Jefferson
- 1980 (1980): Gus Hancock, Selby Knox , Steven V. Ley
- 1979 (1979): Malcolm H. Chisholm, Geraldine A. Kenney-Wallace, Stan Roberts
- 1978 (1978): Philip D. Magnus , Michael Mingos, George M. Sheldrick
- 1977 (1977): Laurence Barron, Bernard Thomas Golding, J. Steven Ogden
- 1976 (1976): Melvyn Rowen Churchill, Roger Grice , Kevin M. Smith
- 1975 (1975): Robert J. Donovan, John Anthony Osborn , Gerald Pattenden
- 1974 (1974): Laurance D. Hall , Brian F. G. Johnson, Alexander McKillop
- 1973 (1973): Jack Baldwin, Geoffrey Luckhurst , John Forster Nixon
- 1972 (1972): Malcolm Green, David Husain [9], Peter George Sammes
- 1971 (1971): Michael John Perkins, Leon Francis Phillips, Peter L. Timms
- 1970 (1970): A. David Buckingham, Don Cameron , Neville B. H. Jonathan
- 1969 (1969): Peter Day, Malcolm Green, Gordon W. Kirby
- 1968 (1968): A Fish, Frank McCapra, Dudley Howard Williams
- 1967 (1967): Alan Carrington, Richard Norman, John Meurig Thomas
- 1966 (1966): Richard Dixon, Malcolm Tobe
- 1965 (1965): John Cadogan, Ronald Mason
- 1964 (1964): H. Monty Frey, A. Ian Scott
- 1963 (1963): George Andrew Sim
- 1962 (1962): Neil Bartlett
- 1961 (1961): Franz Sondheimer
- 1960 (1960): Robert Haszeldine
- 1959 (1959): Alan Battersby
- 1958 (1958): Charles Kemball
- 1957 (1957): George Wallace Kenner
- 1956 (1956): Kenneth Winfield Bagnall
- 1955 (1955): George Porter
- 1954 (1954): Rex Richards
- 1953 (1953): John Cornforth
- 1952 (1952): James Baddiley
- 1951 (1951): Frederick Sanger
- 1950 (1950): Ronald Sydney Nyholm
- 1949 (1949): Derek Barton
References
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^ "RSC Corday-Morgan Prize Previous Winners". Royal Society of Chemistry. Retrieved 9 October 2014.
^ "RSC Corday-Morgan Prize 2018 Winner". www.rsc.org. Retrieved 2018-05-16.
^ "RSC Corday-Morgan Prize 2018 Winner". www.rsc.org. Retrieved 2018-05-16.
^ "RSC Corday-Morgan Prize 2018 Winner". www.rsc.org. Retrieved 2018-05-16.
^ "Royal Society of Chemistry Prizes and Awards 2016". Royal Society of Chemistry. Archived from the original on 10 May 2016. Retrieved 28 March 2017.
^ "Royal Society of Chemistry Prizes and Awards 2015". Royal Society of Chemistry. Archived from the original on 20 February 2016. Retrieved 7 May 2015.
^ "Winners of RSC Prizes and Awards 2014". Royal Society of Chemistry. Retrieved 9 October 2014.
^ "David Husain: Enterprising physical chemist". The Independent. 3 April 2008. Retrieved 9 September 2018.
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