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The following is a list of Clarivate Citation Laureates in chemistry, considered likely candidates to win the Nobel Prize in Chemistry.[1]
Citation Laureates | Nationality | Motivations | Institute | |
---|---|---|---|---|
2008[2] | ||||
Charles M. Lieber (born 1959) |
United States | "for his transformational research on nanowires, nanomaterials, and their applications." | Harvard University | |
Krzysztof Matyjaszewski (born 1950) |
Poland United States |
"for his development of atom transfer radical polymerization (ATRP) and other methods of "living" polymerization." | Carnegie Mellon University | |
2008 |
Roger Y. Tsien (1952–2016) |
United States | "for his development and application of fluorescent protein probes as visual indicators of cellular function." | |
2009[3] | ||||
Michael Grätzel (born 1944) |
Switzerland | "for his invention of dye-sensitized solar cells, now known as Grätzel cells." | ETH Zurich | |
Jacqueline Barton (born 1952) |
United States | "for their pioneering research of electron charge transfer in DNA." | California Institute of Technology | |
Bernd Giese (born 1940) |
Germany | University of Basel | ||
Gary Schuster (born 1946) |
United States | Georgia Institute of Technology | ||
2021 |
Benjamin List (born 1968) |
Germany | "for his development of organic asymmetric catalysis using enamines." | |
2010[4] | ||||
Patrick O. Brown (born 1954) |
United States | "for the invention and application of DNA microarrays, a revolutionary tool in the study of variation in gene expression." | ||
Susumu Kitagawa (born 1951) |
Japan | "for the design and development of porous metal-organic frameworks, whose applications include hydrogen and methane storage, gas purification, and gas separation, among others." | Kyoto University | |
Omar M. Yaghi (born 1965) |
Jordan United States |
University of California, Los Angeles | ||
Stephen J. Lippard (born 1940) |
United States | "for pioneering research in bioinorganic chemistry, including the discovery of metallointercalators to disrupt DNA replication, an important contribution to improved cancer therapy." | Massachusetts Institute of Technology | |
2011[5] | ||||
Allen J. Bard (born 1933) |
United States | "for the development and application of scanning electrochemical microscopy." | University of Texas at Austin | |
2012 |
Martin Karplus (born 1930) |
Austria United States |
"for pioneering simulations of the molecular dynamics of biomolecules." | |
Jean Fréchet (born 1944) |
France United States |
"for the invention and development of dendritic polymers." | ||
Donald Tomalia (born 1938) |
United States |
| ||
Fritz Vögtle (1939–2017) |
Germany | University of Bonn | ||
2012[6] | ||||
2023 |
Louis E. Brus (born 1943) |
United States | "for discovery of colloidal semiconductor nanocrystals (quantum dots)." | Columbia University |
Akira Fujishima (born 1942) |
Japan | "for the discovery of photocatalytic properties of titanium dioxide (the Honda-Fujishima Effect)." | Tokyo University of Science | |
Masatake Haruta (1947–2022) |
Japan | "for independent foundational discoveries of catalysis by gold." | Tokyo Metropolitan University | |
Graham Hutchings (born 1951) |
United Kingdom | Cardiff University | ||
2013[7] | ||||
Paul Alivisatos (born 1959) |
United States | "for contributions to DNA nanotechnology." | University of California, Berkeley | |
Chad Mirkin (born 1963) |
United States | Northwestern University | ||
Nadrian Seeman (1945–2021) |
United States | New York University | ||
Bruce Ames (born 1928) |
United States | "for the invention of the Ames test of mutagenicity." | ||
M.G. Finn (born 1958) |
United States | "for the development of modular click chemistry." | Georgia Institute of Technology | |
Valery Fokin (born 1971) |
United States | Scripps Research Institute | ||
2001 2022 |
Karl Barry Sharpless (born 1941) |
United States | ||
2014[8] | ||||
Charles T. Kresge (born 1954) |
United States | "for design of functional mesoporous materials." | Saudi Aramco | |
Ryoo Ryong (born 1955) |
South Korea | Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology | ||
Galen D. Stucky (born 1936) |
United States | University of California, Santa Barbara | ||
Graeme Moad (born 1952) |
Australia | "for development of the reversible addition-fragmentation chain transfer (RAFT) polymerization process." | Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation | |
Ezio Rizzardo (born 1943) |
Australia | |||
San Thang (born 1954) |
Australia | |||
Ching Wan Tang (1947) |
Hong Kong United States |
"for their invention of the organic light emitting diode." | ||
Steven Van Slyke (born 1956) |
United States | Kateeva | ||
2015[9] | ||||
2022 |
Carolyn Bertozzi (born 1966) |
United States | "for foundational contributions to bioorthogonal chemistry." | |
2020 |
Emmanuelle Charpentier (born 1968) |
France | "for the development of the CRISPR-cas9 method for genome editing." | |
2020 |
Jennifer Doudna (born 1964) |
United States | ||
2019 |
John B. Goodenough (born 1922) |
United States | "for pioneering research leading to the development of the lithium-ion battery." | University of Texas at Austin |
2019 |
M. Stanley Whittingham (born 1941) |
United Kingdom United States |
Birmingham University | |
2016[10] | ||||
George Church (born 1954) |
United States | "for application of CRISPR-cas9 gene editing in mouse and human cells." | Harvard Medical School | |
Feng Zhang (born 1981) |
China United States |
|||
Dennis Lo Yuk-Ming (born 1963) |
Hong Kong | "for detecting cell-free fetal DNA in maternal plasma, a revolution in noninvasive prenatal testing." | Chinese University of Hong Kong | |
Hiroshi Maeda (1938–2021) |
Japan | "for discovering the enhanced permeability and retention (EPR) effect of macromolecular drugs, a key finding for cancer therapeutics." | Kumamoto University | |
Yasuhiro Matsumura (born 1955) |
Japan | National Cancer Center | ||
2017[11] | ||||
John E. Bercaw (born 1944) |
United States | "for critical contributions to C-H functionalization." | California Institute of Technology | |
Robert G. Bergman (born 1942) |
United States | University of California, Berkeley | ||
Georgiy B. Shul'pin (born 1946) |
Russia | Russian Academy of Sciences | ||
Jens Nørskov (born 1952) |
Denmark | "for fundamental advances, theoretical and practical, in heterogeneous catalysis on solid surfaces." | ||
Tsutomu Miyasaka (born 1953) |
Japan | "for their discovery and application of perovskite materials to achieve efficient energy conversion." | Toin University of Yokohama | |
Nam-Gyu Park (born 1960) |
South Korea | Sungkyunkwan University | ||
Henry Snaith (born 1978) |
United Kingdom | University of Oxford | ||
2018[12] | ||||
Eric Jacobsen (born 1960) |
United States | "for contributions to catalytic reactions for organic synthesis, especially for the development of Jacobsen epoxidation." | Harvard University | |
George M. Sheldrick (born 1942) |
United Kingdom | "for his enormous influence in structural crystallography." | University of Göttingen | |
JoAnne Stubbe (born 1946) |
United States | "for her discovery that ribonucleotide reductases transform ribonucleotides into deoxyribonucleotides by a free-radical mechanism." | Massachusetts Institute of Technology | |
2019[13] | ||||
Rolf Huisgen (1920–2020) |
Germany | "for development of the 1,3-Dipolar cycloaddition Reaction (Huisgen reaction) and the variant Copper(I)-catalyzed Azide-Alkyne cycloaddition (Meldal)." | University of Munich | |
2022 |
Morten P. Meldal (born 1954) |
Denmark | University of Copenhagen | |
Edwin Southern (born 1938) |
United Kingdom | "for invention of the Southern blot method for determining specific DNA sequences." | University of Oxford | |
Marvin H. Caruthers (born 1940) |
United States | "for contributions to protein and DNA sequencing and synthesis." | University of Colorado | |
Leroy Hood (born 1938) |
United States | |||
Michael Hunkapiller (born 1948) |
United States | Pacific Biosciences | ||
2020[14] | ||||
2023 |
Moungi Bawendi (born 1961) |
United States | "for synthesis of nanocrystals with precise attributes for a wide range of applications in physical, biological, and medical systems." | Massachusetts Institute of Technology |
Christopher B. Murray (born ?) |
United States | University of Pennsylvania | ||
Hyeon Taeghwan (born 1964) |
South Korea | |||
Stephen L. Buchwald (born 1955) |
United States | "for contributions to organometallic chemistry, notably the Buchwald–Hartwig amination which forms carbon–nitrogen bonds through palladium-catalyzed coupling reactions of amines with aryl halides." | Massachusetts Institute of Technology | |
John F. Hartwig (born 1964) |
United States | University of California, Berkeley | ||
Makoto Fujita (born 1957) |
Japan | "for advances in supramolecular chemistry through self-assembly strategies that take inspiration from nature itself." | University of Tokyo | |
2021[15] | ||||
Barry Halliwell (born 1949) |
United Kingdom | "for pioneering research in free-radical chemistry including the role of free radicals and antioxidants in human disease." | ||
William L. Jorgensen (born 1949) |
United States | "for methods and studies in the computational chemistry of organic and biomolecular systems in solution, contributing to rational drug design and synthesis." | Yale University | |
Mitsuo Sawamoto (born 1954) |
Japan | "for discovery and development of metal-catalyzed living radical polymerization." | ||
2022[16] | ||||
Zhenan Bao (born 1970) |
China United States |
"for the development of novel biomimetic applications of organic and polymeric electronic materials, including flexible 'electronic skin'." | Stanford University | |
Bonnie Bassler (born 1962) |
United States | "for research on regulation of gene expression in bacteria through quorum sensing, a chemical communication system." | ||
Everett Peter Greenberg (born 1948) |
United States | University of Washington | ||
Daniel G. Nocera (born 1957) |
United States | "for fundamental experimental and theoretical contributions to proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET) and its application to energy science and biology." | Harvard University | |
2023[17] | ||||
James J. Collins (born 1965) |
United States | "for pioneering work on synthetic gene circuits, which launched the field of synthetic biology." | Massachusetts Institute of Technology | |
Michael Elowitz (born 1970) |
United States | California Institute of Technology, Pasadena | ||
Stanislas Leibler (born 1957) |
United States | Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton | ||
Shankar Balasubramanian (born 1966) |
india United Kingdom |
"for the co-invention of next-generation DNA sequencing methodology that has revolutionized biological research." | University of Cambridge, Cambridge | |
David Klenerman (born 1959) |
United Kingdom | University of Cambridge, Cambridge | ||
Kazunori Kataoka (born 1950) |
Japan | "for the development of innovative drug and gene targeting and delivery methods." | University of Tokyo | |
Vladimir P. Torchilin (born 1946) |
United States | Northeastern University, Boston | ||
Karen L. Wooley (born 1966) |
United States | Texas A&M University | ||
2024[18] | ||||
David Baker (born 1962) |
United States | "for contributions to the prediction and design of three-dimensional protein structures and functions." | Howard Hughes Medical Institute University of Washington School of Medicine | |
John M. Jumper (born ?) |
United States | Google DeepMind | ||
Demis Hassabis (born 1976) |
United States | |||
Kazunari Dōmen (born 1953) |
Japan | "for fundamental research on photocatalysts for water splitting and the construction of solar hydrogen production systems." | Shinshu University University of Tokyo | |
Roberto Car (born 1947) |
Italy | "for the Car–Parrinello method for calculating ab-initio molecular dynamics, a revolution in computational chemistry." | Princeton University | |
Michele Parrinello (born 1945) |
Italy | Università della Svizzera italiana ETH Zurich |
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