Emil Fischer Medal

Emil Fischer Medal

     

  • Subject: organic chemistry
  • Consists of: 7,500 euros, gold medal, certificate
  • First awarded: 1912
  • Awarded in: Even years
  •  

The GDCh awards the Emil Fischer Medal for outstanding performance in the field of organic chemistry. The award was donated by Carl Duisberg in 1912 on the occasion of Emil Fischer's 60th birthday and was initially financed by the Carl Duisberg Foundation and later from a special fund of the GDCh. Emil Fischer was one of the most important chemists of his time and received the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1902 for his sugar and purine work.

Current awardee: Frank Glorius, University of Münster

Professor Frank Glorius is awarded the Emil Fischer Medal in recognition of his groundbreaking contributions to the chemistry of N-heterocyclic carbenes as ligands in catalysis, as organocatalysts or for the modification of surfaces, to the stereoselective hydrogenation of aromatics, to CH activation and photocatalysis, to the development of novel screening methods and, most recently, to the use of machine learning in organic chemistry.

More information about Professor Glorius

awardee interview 2020

Distinguished persons since 1912

2024

Frank Glorius, University of Münster

2022 Peter Bäuerle, University of Ulm
2020 Peter H. Seeberger, Potsdam
2018 Thorsten Bach, Munich
2016 Dirk Trauner, Munich
2014 Matthias Beller, Rostock
2012 Herbert Waldmann, Dortmund
2010 Johann Mulzer, Vienna
2008 Peter Hofmann, Heidelberg
2006 Bernd Giese, Basel/Switzerland
2004 Lutz Friedjan Tietze, Göttingen
2002 Dieter Enders, Aachen
2000 Horst Kunz, Mainz
1997 Horst Kessler, Munich
1995 Richard R. Schmidt, Konstanz
1992 Ivar Ugi, Munich
1990 Ekkehard Winterfeldt, Hanover
1988 Rolf Geiger, Frankfurt a. M.
1986 Wolfgang Steglich, Bonn
1984 Gerhard Quinkert, Frankfurt a. M.
1982 Hermann Stetter, Aachen
1980 Hans Paulsen, Hamburg
1978 Hans Musso, Karlsruhe
1975 Emanuel Vogel, Cologne
1970 Günther Wilke, Mülheim an der Ruhr
1969 Theodor Wieland, Heidelberg
1967 Arthur Lüttringhaus, Freiburg
1966 Hellmut Bredereck, Stuttgart
1962 Otto Westphal, Freiburg
1961

Hans Herloff Inhoffen, Braunschweig
Friedrich Weygand, Munich

1960 Rudolf Criegee, Karlsruhe
1958 Walter Koenig, Dresden
1955 Hans-Heinrich Schlubach, Hamburg
1954 Hans Brockmann, Göttingen
1952 Karl Freudenberg, Heidelberg
1951 Burckhardt Helferich, Bonn
1950 Hans Meerwein, Marburg

awardee of the Carl Duisberg Foundation

1940 Clemens Schöpf, Darmstadt
1938 Kurt Adler, Cologne
1937

Gerhard Domagk, Wuppertal-Elberfeld
Josef Klarer, Wuppertal-Elberfeld

1935 Adolf Butenandt, Gdansk
1934

Hans Mauß, Wuppertal-Elberfeld
Fritz Mietsch, Wuppertal-Elberfeld

1933 Fritz Kögl, Utrecht/Netherlands
1931 Felix Ehrlich, Wroclaw
1930

Kurt H. Meyer, Ludwigshafen
Hermann Staudinger, Freiburg

1928

Fritz Schönhöfer, Wuppertal-Elberfeld
Werner Schulemann, Wuppertal-Elberfeld
August Wingler, Leverkusen

1927

Franz Fischer, Mülheim an der Ruhr
Alwin Mittasch, Mannheim

1922 Carl Neuberg, Berlin
1919 Otto Hahn, Berlin
1912 Fritz Hofmann, Wroclaw

Selection committee

Prof. Dr. Bart Jan Ravoo, University of Münster (lead)
Prof. Dr. Lutz Ackermann, Georg August University of Göttingen
Prof. Dr. Anke Krüger, University of Stuttgart
Dr. Carl Friedrich Nising, Bayer AG
Prof. Dr. Tanja Weil, Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research
Prof. Dr. Frank Würthner, Julius Maximilian University of Würzburg

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last modified: 23.08.2024 12:29 H from Translator