Chemistry:Carbon Medal
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The Carbon Medal is a medal of achievement in carbon science and technology given by the American Carbon Society for the "... outstanding contributions to the discovery of novel carbon products or processes."[1][2]
Awardees
The following have won the Carbon Medal:[citation needed]
- 1997 Robert Curl (Rice University, co-discoverer of fullerene)
- 1997 Harry Kroto (University of Sussex, co-discoverer of fullerene)
- 1997 Richard Smalley (Rice University, co-discoverer of fullerene)
- 2001 Mildred Dresselhaus (MIT, researcher of carbon nanotubes)
- 2004 Donald S. Bethune (IBM research, researcher of single-walled carbon nanotubes)
- 2004 Morinobu Endo (Shinshu University, one of the pioneers of carbon nanofibers and carbon nanotubes synthesis)
- 2004 Sumio Iijima (NEC, often cited as the inventor of carbon nanotubes)
- 2016 Andre Geim (University of Manchester, co-inventor of graphene)
- 2016 Konstantin Novoselov (University of Manchester, co-inventor of graphene)
References
- ↑ "Medal of Achievement in Carbon Science and Technology". The American Carbon Society. http://www.americancarbonsociety.org/node/33.
- ↑ "Carbon Medal". The World Conference on Carbon 2016. http://carbon.outreach.psu.edu/program/awards/carbon-medal/.
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon Medal.
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