Dream Chemistry Award

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The Dream Chemistry Award is an international competition for young scientists organized by the Institute of Organic Chemistry and Biochemistry of the Czech Academy of Sciences (IOCB Prague) and the Institute of Physical Chemistry of the Polish Academy of Sciences.[1]

The competition was established in 2013 by Robert Hołyst and the Institute of Physical Chemistry of the PAS in Warsaw,[2] with the next competition taking place in 2015. In 2017, IOCB Prague started co-sponsoring the event,[3] and since then the competition has been held every year alternately in Prague and Warsaw.

The competition awards visionary projects from the field of chemistry or chemistry-related disciplines that have the ambition and potential to change the world for the better.[4] The contest is for scientists who are younger than 38 years of age who have been nominated by respected experts. The winner of the contest receives a financial reward of €10,000. In addition, starting in 2019, the finalists receive a reward of €1,000.[5]

The coordinators of the competition are Pavel Jungwirth from IOCB Prague and Robert Hołyst from the Institute of Physical Chemistry of the PAS. The members of the Honorary Committee include Josef Michl and Richard R. Schrock, the laureate of the 2005 Nobel Prize in Chemistry.

Recipients

2025

Winner:

Finalists:

2024

Winner:

  • Richard Liu (Harvard University, USA), Project: Organic Molecules That Mimic Transition Metals for Sustainable Chemical Synthesis

Finalists:

2023

Winner:

  • Mark Levin (University of Chicago, USA), Project: Skeletal Editing: Enabling Synthesis that Matches Design

Finalists:

2022

Winner:

Finalists:

2021

Winner:

Finalists:

2020

Winner:

Finalists:

  • Ivana Drienovska (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, The Netherlands), Project: New-to-Nature Reactivities in Biocatalysis: A Closer Look at Enzymatic Fluorination
  • Pawel Dydio (Universite de Strasbourg, ISIS, France), Project: Artificial Intelligence for Sustainable Chemistry of the Future
  • Christopher Hendon (University of Oregon, USA), Project: A Chemical Fix for Bad Beverages
  • Yunyan Qiu (Northwestern University, USA), Project: Achieving the Holy Grail of Polymer Synthesis Using Catalytic Artificial Molecular Machines

2019

Winner:

Finalists:

2018

Winner:

  • Eric D. Głowacki (Linköping University, Sweden), Project: Abundant organic catalysts for a peroxide clean energy cycle[7]

Finalists:

2017

Winner:

Finalists:

2015

Winner:

Finalists:

2013

Winner:

Finalists:

References

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