As the president of Phi Lambda Upsilon (The national chemistry honorary society) I am reaching out to you to ask that you consider nominating your best young research faculty for the Fresenius Award. This award highlights the excellent research of one chemist (under 35 at the time of nomination) each year at the Spring ACS meeting black tie awards dinner. For further information see the attached document or feel free to respond to this email.
If the chair has changed since this list was generated, please let me know so that I can forward this to the correct person.
Best,
Lucas
_____________________________________
Lucas J. Tucker, Ph.D.
Chair and Professor of Chemistry and Biochemistry
Phi Lambda Upsilon National President
Phi Lambda Upsilon Lucas J. Tucker, Ph. D.National President Siena College515 Loudon RoadLoudonville, NY 12211Ofc: (518) 782-6953Cell: (518) 229-5008E-Mail: ltucker@siena.edu |
The National Fresenius Award
Nomination Procedure
The Award
The Fresenius Award is presented at the ACS Spring meeting alongside all of the most prestigious awards that the society presents. It is an excellent opportunity for an early career scientist to be recognized for their excellent work and highlight the excellence that they have brought to the scientific community.
Deadline: February 1
Nominations must be submitted to, theNational PresidentofPhi Lambda Upsiloneither by post or as e-mail attachments by the first day of February to be considered.
Required Qualifications:
i. The award nominee must be under 35 years of age at the date of the nomination.
ii. The nominee must have made substantial scientific contributions that are
recognized nationally.
iii. The nominee must be nominated by the Chair of a Department of
Chemistry, Biochemistry or Chemical Engineering in U.S Universities as
listed in the American Chemistry Society Directory of Graduate Research.
A curriculum vitae of the nominee must accompany the nomination; the following information is requested:
- Full name
- Place and Date of Birth
- Educational career (undergraduate and graduate).
- Professional activities (since receipt of last degree)
- List of publications (reprints should not be included)
- List of honors, awards, distinctions or noteworthy achievements
Three (3) letters of recommendation from former mentors and/or professional associates should also be provided. Selection of the recipient is the responsibility of an Awards Committee composed of eminent scientists. The award consists of a plaque and a monetary award of $5,000 to be presented at the ACS Spring National Meeting following the September announcement next year.
Executive Summary. A brief (25 words or less) description of the work that could be inscribed on an award certificate or used in reference to a candidate’s work in broadest terms.
Previous National Fresenius Award Recipients
1965 | Martin Karplus | Columbia University |
1966 | Ronald Breslow | Columbia University |
1967 | Mostafa El Sayed | UC Los Angeles |
1968 | John Baldeschwieler | Stanford University |
1969 | Roald Hoffman | Cornell University |
1970 | Harry Gray | Caltech |
1971 | Willis Flygare | University of Illinois |
1972 | Charles Cantor | Columbia University |
1973 | Nicholas Turro | Columbia University |
1974 | Richard Zare | Columbia University |
1975 | Robert Vaughn | Caltech |
1976 | Joseph B. Lambert | Northwestern University |
1977 | William P. Reinhardt | University of Colorado |
1978 | Patrick S. Mariano | Texas A&M University |
1979 | Tobin J. Marks | Northwestern University |
1980 | John R. Shapley | University of Illinois |
1981 | R. P. Van Duyne | Northwestern University |
1982 | Michael J. Berry | Rice University |
1983 | George C. Schatz | Northwestern University |
1984 | Mark S. Wrighton | MIT |
1985 | Ben Freiser | Purdue University |
1986 | Jacqueline Barton | Columbia University |
1987 | Ian Rothwell | Purdue University |
1988 | Peter G. Wolynes | University of Illinois |
1989 | James L. Skinner | Columbia University |
1990 | Nathan S. Lewis | Stanford University |
1991 | Peter G. Schultz | UC Berkeley |
1992 | John D. Simon | UC San Diego |
1993 | Joseph T. Hupp | Northwestern University |
1994 | Scott D. Rychnovsky | University of Minnesota |
1995 | Robert Waymouth | Stanford University |
1996 | Erick M. Carreira | Caltech |
1997 | C. C. Cummins | MIT |
1998 | Chad A. Mirkin | Northwestern University |
1999 | Joseph DeSimone | Univ. of North Carolina |
2000 | David E. Clemmer | Indiana University |
2001 | Jillian M. Buriak | Purdue University |
2002 | Andrei Tokmakoff | MIT |
2003 | P. Wittung-Stafshede | Tulane University |
2004 | Jeffrey R. Long | UC Berkeley |
2005 | L. Andrew Lyon | Georgia Tech |
2006 | Phil S. Baran | Scripps Research Inst. |
2007 | Daniel T. Chiu | University of Washington |
2008 | Teri W. Odom | Northwestern University |
2009 | Daniel J. Mindiola | Indiana University |
2010 | Melanie S. Sanford | University of Michigan |
2011 | Raymond E. Schaak | Penn State University |
2012 | Theodore A. Betley | Harvard University |
2013 | William R. Dichtel | Cornell University |
2014 | Abigail G. Doyle | Princeton University |
2015 | Douglas A. Mitchell | University of Illinois |
2016 | Neal K. Devaraj | UC San Diego |
2017 | Thomas J. Maimone | UC Berkeley |
2018 | Brandi M. Cossairt | University of Washington |
2019 | Kyle Lancaster | Cornell University |
2020 | Timothy Berkelbach | Columbia University |
2021 | Song Lin | Cornell University |
2022 | Todd Hyster | Cornell University |
2023 | Maxwell Robb | Caltech |