Bourke Award

The Bourke Award of the Royal Society of Chemistry is an annual prize open to academics from outside the UK. Originally established by the Faraday Society and known as the Bourke Lectures, the award of £2000 enables experts in physical chemistry or chemical physics to present their work in the UK. The winner also receives a commemorative medal.[1]

Winners

Source:[2]

Year Recipient
2019David Beratan[3]
2018Daniel M. Neumark
2017Kieron Burke[4]
2016Laura Gagliardi
2015Lyndon Emsley
2014Ann McDermott
2013Bert Weckhuysen
2012Gregory D. Scholes
2011Mark Ratner
2010Michael T. Bowers
2009Gerard J. M. Meijer
2008-09Thomas R. Rizzo
2008Ole G. Mouritsen
2007George C. Schatz
2006Christian Amatore
2005Marsha I. Lester
2004Paul D. Lett
2003David A. Andelman
2002David J. Nesbitt
2001Ewine van Dishoeck
2000Curt Wittig
1999Daan Frenkel
1998Terry A. Miller
1997Rutger van Santen
1996Kenneth C. Showalter
1995Stephen Leone
1994Dieter M. Kolb
1993Henk Lekkerkerker
1992Richard J. Saykally
1991Gerhard Ertl
1990Keiji Morokuma
1989Donald H. Levy
1988Alexander Pines
1987Martin Quack
1986Lucien Monnerie
1985David Chandler
1984Vladimir Ponec
1983Eizi Hirota
1982E. C. M. Clementi
1981Robin M. Hochstrasser
1980Adriano Zecchina
1979Ora Kedem
1978Antoni Dymanus
1977Roy Gerald Gordon
1976Pierre-Gilles de Gennes
1975P Pimental [sic]
1974Joshua Jortner
1973Bogdan Baranowski
1972Ilya Prigogine
1971H Wolf
1970E. Ulrich Franck
1968/69William Klemperer
1967Dudley R. Herschbach
G. Wilse Robinson
1966S Sadron [sic], Harden M. McConnell
1965Heinz Gerischer
1964Stuart A. Rice
1963Alfonso Maria Liquori, Victor Talrose
1962Manfred Eigen
Joan van der Waals
1961Harold S. Johnston
1960Harold J. Bernstein
A Perterlin [sic]
1959Robert Gomer
V. V. Voevodsky
1958Walter H. Stockmauer
Robert Harold Stokes
1957Arend Joan Rutgers
Wilhelm Jost
1956Jan J. Hermans
1955Donald Hornig
gollark: So *everyone* gets exactly 2 spells a day shared?
gollark: From what? They have no context except a bunch of code they also can't read.
gollark: Most useful access to it requires an account. Nobody knows how to make one, especially as the authentication mechanisms it relied on are all down, but fortunately a "try APL" REPL with more permissions than it probably should have still functions and allows anonymous access.
gollark: Well, in my headcanon, the system was never designed to be "magic" but is a relic from a more advanced civilisation which can self-repair a decent amount.
gollark: Oh wait, you can, have the system also have a bunch of robotic lifeforms tied into it but make them weird lifeishly and call them "elementals".

See also

References

  1. "RSC Bourke Award". The Royal Society of Chemistry. Retrieved 17 September 2018.
  2. "RSC Bourke Award Previous Winners". The Royal Society of Chemistry. Retrieved 17 September 2018.
  3. "Bourke Award 2019". Retrieved 10 July 2019.
  4. "Kieron Burke wins 2017 Bourke Award from Britain's Royal Society of Chemistry". UCI News. 10 May 2017. Retrieved 5 October 2018.
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