Faraday Medal (Electrochemistry)
The Faraday Medal ( Faraday Medal ) is an award that has been given by the Electrochemistry Group of the Royal Society of Chemistry since 1977 to internationally outstanding electrochemists who do not work in Great Britain, initially irregularly, now annually.
Award winners
- 1977 Veniamin Grigorievich Levich (1917–1987)
- 1981 John O'M. Bockris , Texas A&M University
- 1983 Jean-Michel Savéant
- 1985 Michel Armand
- 1987 Heinz Gerischer , Fritz Haber Institute of the Max Planck Society
- 1991 David AJ Rand , CSIRO Division of Mineral Chemistry, Port Melbourne
- 1994 Stanley Bruckenstein , University at Buffalo
- 1995 Michael J. Weaver (1947-2002), Purdue University
- 1996 Adam Heller , University of Texas
- 1998 Wolf Vielstich , University of Bonn
- 1999 Philippe Allongue , CNRS
- 2000 Alan Maxwell Bond (* 1946), Monash University
- 2001 Michael Grätzel , École polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne
- 2002 Henry S. White , University of Utah
- 2003 Dieter M. Kolb (1942–2011), Ulm University
- 2004 Daniel A. Scherson , Case Western Reserve University
- 2005 Robert Mark Wightman , University of North Carolina
- 2006 Hubert H. Girault , École polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne
- 2007 Christian Amatore , CNRS
- 2008 Nathan S. Lewis , California Institute of Technology
- 2009 Reginald M. Penner , University of California, Irvine
- 2011 Héctor D. Abruña , Cornell University
- 2012 Zhong-Qun Tian , Xiamen University
- 2013 Nenad Markovic , Argonne National Laboratory
- 2014 Masatoshi Osawa , University of Hokkaido
- 2015 Richard Crooks , University of Texas at Austin
- 2016 Justin Gooding , University of New South Wales
- 2017 Marc Koper , Leiden University
- 2018 Yang Shao-Horn , Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- 2019 Martin Winter , University of Münster, Research Center Jülich
- 2020 Shirley Meng , University of California, SanDiego
Web links
- The Faraday Medal at the Royal Society of Chemistry (rsc.org)
- ^ UC San Diego battery pioneer Shirley Meng earns the Faraday Medal from the Royal Society of Chemistry. In: ucsd.edu. University of California, San Diego, April 6, 2020, accessed August 2, 2020 .