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1 Recipients  





2 See also  





3 References  














Tilden Prize






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Tilden Prize
Sponsored byRoyal Society of Chemistry
Date1939 (1939)
Reward(s)£5000
Websitewww.rsc.org/ScienceAndTechnology/Awards/TildenPrizes/

The Tilden Prize is an award that is made by the Royal Society of Chemistry for advances in chemistry. The award was established in 1939 and commemorates Sir William A. Tilden, a prominent British chemist. The prize runs annually with up to three prizes available. Winners receive £5000, a medal and certificate.[1]

Recipients[edit]

Recipients of the award, given since 1939,[2] include:

  • 2022 – Timothy Donohoe, Christopher Hardacre, David K. Smith
  • 2021 – Jonathan Reid, Jonathan W. Steed [fi],[3] Charlotte Williams
  • 2020 – Christiane Timmel, Stephen Liddle, Jianliang Xiao
  • 2019 – Russell E. Morris, Eric Mcinnes, James Naismith
  • 2018 – Euan Brechin [Wikidata], Jonathan Clayden, Simon Duckett [Wikidata]
  • 2017 – Jas Pal Badyal, Lucy Carpenter, Neil McKeown
  • 2016 – Véronique Gouverneur, Dermot O'Hare [Wikidata], Ivan P. Parkin [Wikidata]
  • 2015 – Mark Bradley [Wikidata],[4] Leroy Cronin, David J. Wales
  • 2014 – Andrew Ian Cooper, Guy Lloyd-Jones, Iain McCulloch
  • 2013 – Steven Armes, Eleanor Campbell, Steven Nolan [Wikidata]
  • 2012 – Harry Anderson, James R. Durrant, Patrick Unwin [Wikidata]
  • 2011 – Jeremy Hutson, John Sutherland, Richard Winpenny
  • 2010 – Duncan Bruce [Wikidata], David Leigh, Kosmas Prassides [Wikidata]
  • Tilden Lectureship 2009/2010 – Philip N. Bartlett [Wikidata], Peter Bruce, Philip Page [Wikidata]
  • 2009 – Andrew Orr-Ewing, Ian Paterson [de], Christopher Hunter
  • 2008 – Varinder Aggarwal, Colin D. Bain [Wikidata], Ian Manners [Wikidata]
  • 2007 – Kenneth David Maclean Harris [Wikidata], David Logan, Nigel Simon Simpkins [Wikidata]
  • 2006 – David O'Hagan [Wikidata], John M.C. Plane, Matthew Rosseinsky
  • 2005 – Paul D. Beer [Wikidata], Richard G. Compton,[5] David W. Knight
  • 2004 – Patrick Fowler [Wikidata], Timothy C. Gallagher [Wikidata], Vernon C. Gibson
  • 2003 – Andrew Holmes, David Parker, Stephen Keith Scott [Wikidata]
  • 2002 – Anthony P. Davis, John Goodby, Peter Anthony Tasker
  • 2001 – Lynn Gladden, Martin Schröder, Thomas J. Simpson
  • 2000 – David J. Cole-Hamilton [de], Christopher J. Moody [Wikidata], Klaus Müller-Dethlefs [Wikidata]
  • 1999 – Jonathan N. L. Connor [Wikidata], A. Guy Orpen [Wikidata], Richard J. K. Taylor [Wikidata]
  • 1998 – Geoffrey Cloke, Dominic Tildesley, William B. Motherwell [Wikidata]
  • 1997 – David Clary, Stephen G. Davies, David E. Fenton
  • 1996 – Michael Ashfold, James Feast, David W. H. Rankin [Wikidata]
  • 1995 – Jeremy K. Burdett, Anthony J. Stace, Eric James Thomas [Wikidata]
  • 1994 – Anthony Barrett, Robert J. Donovan, John Evans
  • 1993 – Peter Edwards, Paul Madden, Douglas W. Young
  • 1992 – Selby Knox [Wikidata], Philip Kocienski, Robin Perutz
  • 1991 – Graham Fleming, John Forster Nixon [Wikidata], Gerald Pattenden [de]
  • 1990 – John M. Brown, Martyn Poliakoff, Robert K. Thomas
  • 1989 – Anthony Legon [Wikidata], Michael Mingos, Jim Staunton
  • 1988 – Brian F. G. Johnson, David Anthony King, Stephen V. Ley
  • 1987 – David Husain [Wikidata],[6] Anthony Kirby, Kenneth Wade
  • 1986 – Mark Child, Brian T. Heaton, Robert Ramage
  • 1985 – David Garner, Ronald Grigg, J H Pritchard
  • 1984 – David Thomas Clark, Ian O. Sutherland [Wikidata], Alfred Geoffrey Sykes [Wikidata]
  • 1983 – Robin Clark, Ian William Murison Smith,[7] Dudley Howard Williams
  • 1982 – C. Robin Ganellin, Malcolm Green, John Philip Simons
  • 1981 – Harold Kroto, Jon McCleverty [Wikidata], Andrew Pelter
  • 1980 – Edward W. Abel, Ian Fleming, Roger Grice [Wikidata]
  • 1979 – John Albery, Jack Baldwin, Peter Maitlis
  • 1978 – James K. Sutherland, James Johnson Turner [Wikidata]
  • 1977 – Neville B. H. Jonathan [Wikidata], Karl Howard Overton
  • 1976 – Richard Norman, Meirion Wyn Roberts [Wikidata]
  • 1975 – Alan R. Katritzky, John White
  • 1974 – Gordon W. Kirby [Wikidata], Bernard L. Shaw
  • 1973 – Charles Wayne Rees, John Meurig Thomas
  • 1972 – Alan Carrington, Michael F. Lappert
  • 1971 – John Cadogan, F. Gordon A. Stone
  • 1970 – Leslie Crombie, Ronald Mason [Wikidata]
  • 1969 – William David Ollis [Wikidata], Robert Williams
  • 1968 – Robert Haszeldine, David W. Turner
  • 1967 – Richard Clive Cookson [Wikidata], Jack Lewis
  • 1966 – Norman Greenwood, Basil Weedon
  • 1965 – Brian Thrush, Mark C. Whiting
  • 1964 – A. David Buckingham, Franz Sondheimer
  • 1963 – Victor M. Clark [Wikidata], Aubrey Trotman-Dickenson
  • 1962 – Alan Battersby, Rex Richards
  • 1961 – Joseph Chatt, Bernard Henbest [Wikidata]
  • 1960 – Ronald Nyholm, Ralph Raphael
  • 1959 – Charles Kemball, Peter Pauson
  • 1958 – James Baddiley, George Porter
  • 1957 – Richard Maling Barrer, Basil Lythgoe
  • 1956 – Ernest Alexander Rudolf Braude [Wikidata], Geoffrey Gee [Wikidata]
  • 1955 – Douglas Hugh Everett, George Wallace Kenner
  • 1954 – Michael J. S. Dewar, Christopher Longuet-Higgins
  • 1953 – John Stuart Anderson, Alan Woodworth Johnson [de]
  • 1952 – Derek Barton, Herbert Marcus Powell
  • 1951 – Charles Coulson, Donald Holroyde Hey
  • 1950 – Frederick Dainton, Francis Leslie Rose
  • 1949 – Meredith Gwynne Evans, Frank Stuart Spring
  • 1948 – C. E. H. Bawn, Frederick Ernest King [Wikidata]
  • 1947 – Ernest Gordon Cox, Ewart Jones
  • 1946 – Albert Ernest Alexander, Maurice Stacey
  • 1945 – Edward David Hughes, William Alexander Waters [Wikidata]
  • 1944 – Wilson Baker, John Monteath Robertson
  • 1943 – Frederick George Mann, Harold Warris Thompson
  • 1942 – Ronald P. Bell, John Masson Gulland
  • 1941 – Harry Julius Emeléus, Robert Downs Haworth
  • 1940 – Harry Melville, Alexander R. Todd
  • 1939 – Edmund Hirst, Leslie Sutton [Wikidata]
  • See also[edit]

    References[edit]

    1. ^ "RSC Tilden Prizes". Retrieved 12 May 2016.
  • ^ "RSC Tilden Prize Previous Winners". Retrieved 12 May 2016.
  • ^ "Professor Jonathan Steed CChem FRSC". Retrieved 14 June 2021.
  • ^ "RSC Tilden Prize 2015". School of Chemistry. 20 May 2015. Retrieved 9 September 2018.
  • ^ Wang, Joseph; Rees, Neil V. (2015). "Professor Richard Compton's 60thBirthday". Electroanalysis. 27 (4). Wiley: 844–845. doi:10.1002/elan.201580033. ISSN 1040-0397.
  • ^ "David Husain: Enterprising physical chemist". The Independent. 3 April 2008. Archived from the original on 7 May 2022. Retrieved 9 September 2018.
  • ^ Hancock, Gus (2018). "Ian William Murison Smith. 15 June 1937—8 November 2016" (PDF). Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society. London: Royal Society. doi:10.1098/rsbm.2017.0033. ISSN 0080-4606. Free access icon

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Tilden_Prize&oldid=1189322897"

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