Ryoji Noyori Prize
The Ryoji Noyori Prize was established by the Society of Synthetic Organic Chemistry, Japan in 2002 to commemorate Ryōji Noyori winning the 101st Nobel Prize in Chemistry as well as the 60th anniversary of the Society of Synthetic Organic Chemistry. The prize is given "to recognize and encourage outstanding contributions to research in asymmetric synthetic chemistry defined in its broadest sense."[1] The prize is sponsored by Takasago International Corporation.
Prizewinners
Source: Noyori Prize winners
- 2002 - Henri B. Kagan
- 2003 - Gilbert Stork
- 2004 - Dieter Seebach
- 2005 - Tsutomu Katsuki
- 2006 - David A. Evans
- 2007 - Tamio Hayashi
- 2008 - Andreas Pfaltz
- 2009 - Yoshio Okamoto
- 2010 - Eric N. Jacobsen
- 2011 - Hisashi Yamamoto
- 2012 - Masakatsu Shibasaki
- 2013 - Barry Trost
- 2014 - Dieter Enders
- 2015 - Larry E. Overman
- 2016 - Keiji Maruoka
- 2017 - David MacMillan
gollark: The requester killed it again.
gollark: Fixed.
gollark: That should be in the manifest, actually. Better check.
gollark: Did you select the right profile?
gollark: I couldn't say.
See also
- List of chemistry awards
- List of prizes named after people
References
- "Ryoji Noyori Prize". SSOCJ - The Society of Synthetic Organic Chemistry, Japan. Retrieved 18 February 2019.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.