Melvin Mooney Distinguished Technology Award
The Melvin Mooney Distinguished Technology Award is a professional award conferred by the American Chemical Society, Rubber Division. Established in 1983, the award is named after Melvin Mooney, developer of the Mooney viscometer and of the Mooney-Rivlin hyperelastic law. The award consists of an engraved plaque and prize money. The medal honors individuals "who have exhibited exceptional technical competency by making significant and repeated contributions to rubber science and technology".[1]
Recipients
Source: Rubber Division, American Chemical Society
1980s
- 1982 J. Roger Beatty
- 1983 Aubert Y. Coran - Monsanto researcher responsible for invention of thermoplastic elastomer Geolast
- 1984 Eli M. Dannenberg
- 1985 William M. Hess
- 1986 Albert M. Gessler
- 1987 Avrom I. Medalia
- 1988 John G. Sommer
- 1989 Joginder Lal
1990s
- 1990 Gerard Kraus
- 1991 Charles Schollenberger
- 1992 Robert W. Layer
- 1993 John R. Dunn
- 1994 Noboru Tokita
- 1995 Edward N. Kresge - Exxon Chief Polymer Scientist who developed tailored molecular weight density EPDM elastomers
- 1997 Russell A. Livigni - Gencorp scientist known for discovery and development of barium-based catalysts for the polymerization of butadiene and its copolymerization with styrene to give high trans rubbers with low vinyl content
- 1998 Henry Hsieh
- 1999 Avraam I. Isayev - University of Akron Professor of Polymer Science
2000s
- 2000 Joseph Kuczkowski - Goodyear chemist who elucidated mechanisms of antioxidant function, resulting in the commercialization of several new antioxidant systems
- 2002 C. Michael Roland - Naval Research Lab scientist recognized for blast and impact protection using elastomers, and for diverse contributions to elastomer science
- 2003 Walter H. Waddell - Exxon scientist recognized for his work on tire innerliner technology
- 2004 Oon Hock Yeoh - Freudenberg Scientist known for contributions to nonlinear elasticity and fracture mechanics
- 2005 Kenneth F. Castner - Senior Research and Development Associate at Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company
- 2006 Meng-Jaio Wang - scientist known for studies of carbon black
- 2007 Daniel L. Hertz Jr. - President of Seals Eastern
- 2008 Robert P. Lattimer
- 2009 Frederick Ignatz-Hoover - 9th editor of Rubber Chemistry and Technology
2010s
- 2010 William J. van Ooij - University of Cincinnati professor known for elucidating the mechanisms of brass-rubber adhesion in tires
- 2011 P.S. Ravishankar
- 2012 Robert Schuster (rubber scientist)
- 2014 Shingo Futamura - Materials scientist noted for his concept of the Deformation Index
- 2015 Alan H. Muhr - TARRC scientist noted for contributions to understanding the mechanics elastomer applications, including laminated rubber isolators, marine fenders, automotive mounts, and structural energy dissipation systems
- 2016 Dane Parker
- 2017 David J. Lohse
- 2018 Joseph Padovan
gollark: While you're here, consider some x where x^2 mod 384 = 8.3. Continue considering it. This is NOT to distract you.
gollark: So they should line up.
gollark: "Bad" inasmuch as you were seemingly saying that "balanced" outcomes were always the "good" ones earlier.
gollark: I don't see why you would want more disease unless:- you value human suffering or some adjacent thing- you think it would reduce total disease over time, which is irrelevant if you just entirely wipe it out with technologyâ„¢- you value "balance" or something as a goal in itself, which seems bad
gollark: Also vaguely patronising I think, but hard to tell.
See also
- International Rubber Science Hall of Fame: Another ACS award
- Rubber Chemistry and Technology: An ACS journal
- List of chemistry awards
References
- "Science & Technology Award Descriptions & Sponsors". American Chemical Society. Retrieved 20 September 2016.
External links
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