Ludwig Mond Award
Ludwig Mond Award | |
---|---|
Awarded for | Contributions to inorganic chemistry |
Sponsored by | Royal Society of Chemistry |
Date | 1981 |
Country | United Kingdom (international) |
Reward(s) | £2000 |
The Ludwig Mond Award is run annually by the Royal Society of Chemistry. The award is presented for outstanding research in any aspect of inorganic chemistry. The winner receives a monetary prize of £2000, in addition to a medal and a certificate, and completes a UK lecture tour.[1] The winner is chosen by the Dalton Division Awards Committee.
In 2020 the Ludwig Mond Award was merged with the Nyholm Prize for Inorganic Chemistry to form the Mond-Nyholm Prize for Inorganic Chemistry.[2]
Award History
The award was established in 1981 to commemorate the life and work of the chemist Dr Ludwig Mond and followed an endowment from ICI (Imperial Chemical Industries).[1] Mond was born in Kassel, Germany in 1839, and became a noted chemist and industrialist who eventually took British nationality.[3]
Recipients
Source:[4]
- 1981Sir Geoffrey Wilkinson :
- 1983F. Gordon A. Stone :
- 1985Sir Jack Lewis :
- 1987Donald Charlton Bradley :
- 1989Duward F. Shriver :
- 1991Norman N. Greenwood :
- 1993Bernard L. Shaw :
- 1995Hubert Schmidbaur :
- 1997Peter M. Maitlis :
- 1999Kenneth Wade :
- 2001Malcolm H. Chisholm :
- 2003John Forster Nixon :
- 2005Philip P. Power :
- 2007David Garner :
- 2008Robert H. Crabtree, Yale University :
- 2009Christopher Pickett, University of East Anglia :
- 2010Dermot O'Hare , University of Oxford :
- 2011David Parker, Durham University :
- 2012Douglas Stephan, University of Toronto :
- 2013Christopher Cummins, Massachusetts Institute of Technology :
- 2014Gerard Parkin, Columbia University :
- 2015Vivian Yam, The University of Hong Kong : [5]
- 2016Richard Winpenny, University of Manchester :
- 2017Karsten Meyer, Friedrich-Alexander-University Erlangen-Nürnberg (FAU) :
- 2018Warren Piers , University of Calgary :
- 2019Stuart Macgregor, Heriot-Watt University :
- 2020Jeffrey Long, University of California, Berkeley :
See also
References
- ^ a b "Royal Society of Chemistry Ludwig Mond Award".
- ^ "Ludwig Mond Award".
- ^ "Mond, Ludwig".
- ^ "Ludwig Mond Award". Royal Society of Chemistry. 10 November 2020. Retrieved 6 June 2022.
- ^ "RSC Ludwig Mond Award 2015 Winner". Royal Society of Chemistry. 5 May 2015. Retrieved 26 May 2015.
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