Hisashi Yamamoto, Chubu University, Japan
Award Citation: For pioneering and highly creative contributions to the development of methods for the catalytic asymmetric synthesis for carbon–carbon, carbon–oxygen, and carbon–nitrogen bond formations.
The following are the recipients of the 2017 National Awards administered by the American Chemical Society (ACS). Vignettes of the award recipients appeared in the Jan. 2, 2017 issue of C&EN. The recipients were honored at an awards ceremony on Tuesday, April 4 in conjunction with the 254th ACS National Meeting in San Francisco. The Arthur C. Cope Scholar Award recipients will be honored during the fall national meeting in Washington, D.C.
Marcy H. Towns, Purdue University
Award Citation: For research that has increased our understanding of undergraduate laboratory, physical chemistry, and group learning, which has positively impacted teaching and learning in chemistry.
Peter J. Dunn, Pfizer (Retired)
Award Citation: For leading the Pfizer Green Chemistry Program and receiving significant external recognition, including for the greener total synthesis of sildenafil citrate.
Yvonne C. Martin, Abbott Laboratories, AbbVie
Award Citation: For leading the field through creative additions, thoughtful application, and enthusiastic promotion of the tools of computer-aided drug design.
Douglas R. Worsnop, Aerodyne Research Inc. and University of Helsinki, Finland
Award Citation: For pioneering research on gas-aqueous atmospheric chemistry and the development of the aerosol mass spectrometer, which has revolutionized atmospheric aerosol measurements.
Richard B. Silverman, Northwestern University
Award Citation: For his fundamental enzyme inhibitor work resulting in his invention of pregabalin, which has become the blockbuster drug LyricaTM, marketed by Pfizer for fibromyalgia, neuropathic pain, spinal cord injury pain, and epilepsy.
Antonio Togni, ETH Zurich, Switzerland
Award Citation: For research on electrophilic trifluoromethylation that combines rational experimental design, comprehensive analysis of mechanism, and detailed interpretation of structural influences on bonding and reactivity.
Matthew S. Sigman, University of Utah
Award Citation: For his creative, seminal work in synthetic organic chemistry, especially his innovative contributions to the Wacker oxidation and Heck reaction.
William B. Tolman, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Award Citation: For impactful contributions to our understanding of copper centers in biology and catalysis, and outstanding leadership in service to the inorganic chemistry and larger community.
Saundra Y. McGuire, Louisiana State University
Award Citation: For her distinguished service encouraging underrepresented students to reach their full potential by teaching them metacognitive learning strategies and mentoring them to success.
Judith M. Iriarte-Gross, Middle Tennessee State University
Award Citation: For her continued persistence and tireless efforts to level the playing field for women in chemistry and to inspire young women to major in chemistry.
Maria Hepel, State University of New York at Potsdam
Award Citation: For fostering and mentoring innovative undergraduate research in diverse fields of public concern related to human health, environmental monitoring and remediation, energy conversion, and nanotechnology.
Robert A. DeVries, R DeVries Consulting, LLC
Philip E. Garrou, Microelectronic Consultants of NC
Carol E. Mohler, The Dow Chemical Company
Eric S. Moyer, LORD Corporation
Theodore M. Stokich, Jr., The Dow Chemical Company
Award Citation: For participating on a Dow Chemical team in the 1990s that developed a high-performance polymeric material, benzocyclobutene, which enabled the microelectronics industry to miniaturize integrated circuit packaging.
Donald F. Hunt, University of Virginia
Award Citation: For pioneering efforts to develop mass spectrometry methods and instrumemtation that facilitated characterization of peptides and proteins and provided the foundation for the field of proteomics.
Zhenan Bao, Stanford University
Award Citation: For pioneering work on the design, processing, and applications of polymer electronic materials for flexible and stretchable electronics.
Robert T. Kennedy, University of Michigan
Award Citation: For the development of innovative techniques in miniaturization of chemical separations and microfluidics for highly sensitive analysis of biological compounds.
Nicholas A. Kotov, University of Michigan
Award Citation: For creative foundational studies of self-assembly phenomena of nanoparticles on surfaces and in dispersions.
Jane Frommer, IBM Research
Award Citation: For pioneering the use of STM/AFM in organic materials, for fundamental studies of the solution state of electronically conducting polymers, and for extensive community involvement.
Lawrence Que, Jr., University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Award Citation: For his many contributions to the field of inorganic chemistry that have profoundly impacted our understanding of the nature of high-valent iron centers in biology.
Marcetta Y. Darensbourg, Texas A&M University
Award Citation: For insight and application of the fundamental principles of organometallic chemistry to hydrogenase enzyme active sites and synthetic analogues as foundational bioorganometallic molecules.
Murugappan Muthukumar, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Award Citation: For incisive and ground-breaking analysis of fundamental problems across the full spectrum of polymer chemistry, especially with respect to charged polymers.
Neal K. Devaraj, University of California, San Diego
Award Citation: For his outstanding accomplishments in bioconjugation chemistry, which include the development of new reactions for cellular imaging and the assembly of artificial membranes.
Rakesh Agrawal, Purdue University
Award Citation: For novel and fundamental insights in the synthesis of energy efficient distillation and membranes based separation processes, and their application in numerous industrial plants.
Cynthia Friend, Harvard University
Award Citation: For her paradigmatic developments in the mechanistic understanding of oxygen-assisted catalytic cycles on gold surfaces and their implementation to nanoporous gold catalysts under realistic conditions.
Cynthia Friend, Harvard University
Award Citation: For her paradigmatic developments in the mechanistic understanding of oxygen-assisted catalytic cycles on gold surfaces and their implementation to nanoporous gold catalysts under realistic conditions.
Douglas A. Keszler, Oregon State University
Award Citation: For pioneering contributions to design and development of functional materials, including nonlinear optical crystals, transistor insulators and semiconductors, solar absorbers, and high-resolution inorganic patterning materials.
Peter Pulay, University of Arkansas
Award Citation: For the analytical gradient method, NMR parameter calculations, local correlation concept, and direct inversion in the iterative subspace technique.
D. Richard Cobb, Eastman Kodak Company (Retired)
Award Citation: For his exemplary service to the ACS as a leader at the local, regional, and national levels, which has had a wide-ranging impact on the Society.
Hisashi Yamamoto, Chubu University, Japan
Award Citation: For pioneering and highly creative contributions to the development of methods for the catalytic asymmetric synthesis for carbon–carbon, carbon–oxygen, and carbon–nitrogen bond formations.
Kim D. Janda, The Scripps Research Institute
Award Citation: For his ability to integrate the principles of chemistry, molecular biology, immunology, and neuropharmacology to create molecules engendered with both biological and chemical function.
Laurie E. Locascio, National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)
Award Citation: For outstanding leadership, vision, and creativity in promoting high-impact research and standards development to serve the chemical and chemical engineering communities.
Benjamin G. Davis, University of Oxford, England
Award Citation: For the development of selective and benign bond-forming strategies applied to biology, enabling functional mimicry of synthetic biomolecules, bioconjugates, cells, and viruses in vitro and in vivo.
Bruce H. Lipshutz, University of California, Santa Barbara
Award Citation: For more than 30 years of contributions of reagents and methodologies, many of which are commercially available and routinely used in synthetic organic chemistry.
Laura E. Slocum, Heathwood Hall Episcopal School, South Carolina
Award Citation: For inspiring students to learn the beauty of our molecular world and for contributions to chemistry education as a researcher, editor, and exemplary educator.
Carolyn Bertozzi, Stanford University and Howard Hughes Medical Institute
Award Citation: For pioneering the field of bioorthogonal chemistry, and for its innovative applications to the field of glycobiology
M.G. Finn, The Scripps Research Institute and the Georgia Institute of Technology
Award Citation: For the development of chemical ligation methods and platforms, applied to bioconjugation and materials chemistry.
Thomas R. Hoye, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Award Citation: For creative contributions across an impressively broad spectrum of organic chemistry, including the development of the hexadehydro-Diels-Alder (HDDA) reaction.
Kathlyn A. Parker, Stony Brook University
Award Citation: For outstanding and creative contributions to the synthesis of structurally complex organic targets.
Mikiko Sodeoka, RIKEN, Japan
Award Citation: For her seminal contributions to the fields of transition metal chemistry, synthetic organic chemistry, organofluorine chemistry, and chemical biology through the development of innovative methodologies and tools.
Sherry R. Chemler, State University of New York at Buffalo
Award Citation: For the development of stereoselective copper-catalyzed alkene difunctionalization reactions and their applications in the synthesis of saturated oxygen and nitrogen heterocycles.
P. Andrew Evans, Queen’s University, Kingston, Ontario
Award Citation: For his development of innovative rhodium-catalyzed reactions and their applications to the synthesis of biologically relevant complex molecules.
Paul J. Hergenrother, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Award Citation: For innovative use and application of organic synthesis to solve critical problems at the frontiers of chemical biology and translational drug discovery.
Christopher D. Vanderwal, University of California, Irvine
Award Citation: For the development of efficient chemical syntheses of structurally complex and biologically significant natural products.
Alejandro Briseno, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Award Citation: For his outstanding accomplishments on the design and synthesis of unconventional, chemically stable polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and their charge transport properties.
Guangbin Dong, University of Texas at Austin and University of Chicago
Award Citation: For his outstanding accomplishments on transition-metal catalyzed synthetic methods involving carbon-carbon and carbon-hydrogen bond activation.
Neil K. Garg, University of California, Los Angeles
Award Citation: For breakthroughs in synthetic methodology and exceptional achievements in natural product synthesis.
Pingyun Feng, University of California, Riverside
Award Citation: For her advances in the synthesis of metal chalcogenide clusters and her crystal engineering of porous semiconductors, coordination polymers, and photocatalysts.
Bruce J. Berne, Columbia University
Award Citation: For pioneering theoretical and computer simulation studies of liquid state and biomolecular systems, and for dramatically increasing the impact of these methods in physical chemistry.
Vicki H. Wysocki, The Ohio State University
Award Citation: For her outstanding accomplishments in the development of surface-induced dissociation for native mass spectrometry structural characterization of non-covalent complexes.
Barbara J. Finlayson-Pitts, University of California, Irvine
Award Citation: For her dedication to serving the chemical research community and for her inspirational work on interpreting science for the general public.
Thomas Hager, University of Oregon School of Journalism and Communication
Award Citation: For displaying a magnificent range of scientific mastery that, time and again, has enabled him to demystify chemistry and other sciences for the public.
Nilay Hazari, Yale University
Award Citation: For creative contributions to the elucidation of inorganic and organometallic reaction mechanisms.
Stephen F. Martin, The University of Texas at Austin
Award Citation: For creative invention and development of new methods and strategies and their application to concise syntheses of a remarkably diverse array of natural products.
David R. Walt, Tufts University
Award Citation: For inventing and commercializing microwell arrays that benefit research, medicine, and agriculture with tremendous impact on the economy through job and value creation.
Salvatore Torquato, Princeton University
Award Citation: For his numerous, unifying theoretical contributions to the statistical mechanics of liquids and glasses, and how the inter-particle interactions present discriminate among alternative crystal structures.
Eleftherios Terry Papoutsakis, University of Delaware
Award Citation: For technology-enabling fundamental contributions in cell-culture engineering, metabolic engineering, and stem-cell biotechnology.
Junqi Li (student), University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Martin D. Burke (preceptor), University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Award Citation: For transforming iterative cross-coupling with MIDA boronates into a powerfully simple and increasingly general automated platform for complex natural products synthesis.
Robert A. Moss, Rutgers University
Award Citation: For pioneering research on carbenes, carbocations, diazirines, and reactive intermediates in general, coupled with sustained pedagogical contributions to physical organic chemistry.
Robert Howard Grubbs, California Instititute of Technology
Award Citation: For his fundamental work and revolutionary contributions for converting hydrocarbons to new molecules, polymers, and materials, using olefin metathesis catalysis.
Thomas Holme, Iowa State University
Award Citation: For his pioneering work in developing curriculum materials for pre-engineering students and advancing our understanding of measurement of student learning in chemistry.
David L. Clark, Los Alamos National Laboratory
Award Citation: For innovative systematic studies of the fundamental chemistry of actinide elements using novel experimental techniques that give new insights into chemical bonding of 5f electrons.
John E. Bercaw, California Institute of Technology
Award Citation: For the elucidation of detailed mechanisms of organometallic reactions that comprise catalytic cycles.
David J. Nesbitt, JILA/NIST and University of Colorado, Boulder
Award Citation: For his outstanding contributions to the understanding of molecular structures and reaction dynamics by high resolution and single-particle spectroscopic methods.
Stephen R. Leone, University of California, Berkeley
Award Citation: For his pioneering development of femtosecond and attosecond extreme ultraviolet pulse measurements for chemical dynamics.
Neal K. Devaraj, University of California, San Diego
Award Citation: For his outstanding contributions toward the development of tetrazine ligations.