John H. Dillon Medal Explained

Awardname:John H. Dillon
Country:United States
Firstawarded:1983
Website:https://www.aps.org/programs/honors/prizes/dillon.cfm
Presenter:American Physical Society

The John H. Dillon Medal is a medal that has been awarded annually by the American Physical Society (APS) since 1983. The recipients are young polymer physicists chosen for "outstanding accomplishment and unusual promise in research in polymer physics" One medal is awarded each year to a nominee who received their terminal degree (e.g. PhD) less than 12 years prior to nomination. The award consists of a $2,000 prize, and $1000 allowance for traveling to the APS March Meeting to present their work, and receive the medal. The award is sponsored by Elsevier.[1]

Recipients

!Year!Recipient!Institution at the time award!Award for!Ref
1984Charles C. Han
1985Andrew J. Lovinger"For outstanding investigations of the structure and properties of ferroelectric polymers."
1986Murugappan Muthukumar
1987Matthew Tirrell"In recognition of extensive research accomplishments leading to greater understanding of the diffusion and interfacial properties of polymers."[2]
1988Dale S. Pearson
1989Frank S. Bates
1990Jean-Michel GuenetCNRS at Institut Charles Sadron"For distinguished research on polymer chain conformation in semicrystalline polymers and for major contributions to the understanding of the nature of the gel state"
1991Kenneth S. Schweizer
1992Glenn H. Fredrickson
1993Mark D. Ediger
1994Scott T. Milner
1995Stephen Z. D. Cheng"For outstanding productivity in research on semicrystalline, liquid crystalline, and high performance polymers."
1996Julia A. KornfieldCalifornia Institute of Technology"For incisive experiments to relate microstructural dynamics to macroscopic behavior of polymer blends, block copolymers and liquid crystals."
1997Nitash P. BalsaraPolytechnic University"For innovative and illuminating optical and neutron experiments to probe the state of order in multi-component polymer systems."
1998Spiros Haralambos Anastasiadis"For pioneering studies of the structure and dynamics of polymer solutions, melts, interfaces, and thin films."
1999Anne M. MayesMassachusetts Institute of Technology"For her unique combination of theoretical and experimental insight into polymer self-organization."
2000Wesley R. BurghardtNorthwestern University"For important discoveries in the structure and flow properties of complex polymeric materials and pioneering experimental methods to study them."
2001Klaus Schmidt-RohrIowa State University"For his creative development of new NMR methods and their insightful use to elucidate polymer structure and dynamics."
2002Timothy J. BunningAir Force Research Laboratory"For his outstanding accomplishments in developing polymer based materials for optical applications and for elucidating the physics and chemistry underlying their formation."
2003Helmut StreyUniversity of Massachusetts Amherst"For contributing significantly to our understanding of the physics of biopolymers and polyelectrolytes."
2004Marcus MullerJohannes Gutenberg University, Germany"For the development of powerful analytic and computational methods, and their application to the structure and dynamics of polymers."
2005Jan GenzerNorth Carolina State University"For his highly creative manipulation of surface properties via monolayer and macromolecular films."
2006Kenji UrayamaKyoto University"For insightful experiments that probe the nature of polymer networks."
2007Darrin J. PochanUniversity of Delaware"For advancing our understanding of the physics of assembly and chain conformation of synthetic polypeptides."
2008Kari Dalnoki-VeressMcMaster University"For significant and innovative experiments in glass formation and polymer crystallization at the nanoscale."[3]
2009Venkat GanesanUniversity of Texas at Austin"For exceptional contributions to innovative computer simulation approaches and analysis of equilibrium and dynamic properties of multicomponent polymetric materials and nanocomposites."
2010Yueh-Lin LooPrinceton University"For insightful experiments connecting structure with performance in conducting polymers, organic electronics, and functional block copolymers"[4]
2011Raffaele MezzengaETH Zurich"For exceptional contributions to the understanding of self-assembly principles and their use to design and control materials with targeted functionalities."
2012Rachel A. SegalmanUniversity of California, Berkeley"For fundamental and technological contributions to the field of polymer science and engineering, especially in the area of rod-coil block copolymers."[5]
2013Mahesh MahanthappaUniversity of Wisconsin"For fundamental studies of block copolymers with controlled dispersity."[6]
2014Ryan C. HaywardUniversity of Massachusetts Amherst"For remarkably innovative and creative approaches to the design, realization, and analysis of responsive polymer gels and self-assembled systems."
2015Chinedum O. OsujiYale University"For fundamental insights into block copolymer self-assembly under applied fields."[7]
2016Thomas H. Epps, IIIUniversity of Delaware"For significant advancement in the control, characterization, and understanding of polymer nanoscale-structure and energetics."[8]
2017Moon J. ParkPohang University of Science & Technology"For incisive experiments elucidating the interplay of transport and morphology in nanostructured ion-containing polymer materials."
2018Bradley D. OlsenMassachusetts Institute of Technology"For significantly expanding our understanding of the physics of polymers, including the self-assembly of block copolymers incorporating a fully folded protein, the influence of polymer shape on diffusion; for engineering novel gels; and for updating the theory of the modulus of a network."
2019Zahra FakhraaiUniversity of Pennsylvania"For exceptional investigations of surface effects in polymer glasses and amyloid aggregation."
2020Rodney PriestleyPrinceton University"For impactful experiments illuminating the glass transition, and for novel processes for the controlled formation of polymer thin films and structured nanocolloids."[9]
2021Bryan W. BoudourisPurdue University"For fundamental insights connecting polymer structure with charge transport in free radical conducting polymers, organic electronics, and functional block copolymers."[10]
2022Jian QinStanford University"For the advancement of analytical and computational tools in the thermodynamics and morphology of ionic or ion-containing polymeric materials."[11]
2023Vivek SharmaUniversity of Illinois Chicago"For fundamental advances toward a molecular-level understanding of non-equilibrium polymer dynamics and for developing methods to accurately measure extensional deformation of polymeric materials and interfacial flows."[12]

See also

References

  1. Web site: John H. Dillon Medal. 2020-08-22. www.aps.org. en.
  2. Web site: 1987 John H. Dillon Medal Recipient.
  3. Web site: Kari Dalnoki-Veress receives 2008 John H. Dillon Medal. 2020-08-22. EurekAlert!. en.
  4. Web site: 2010-05-01. Lynn Loo *01 awarded John H. Dillon Medal by American Physical Society. 2020-08-22. School of Engineering and Applied Science. en-US.
  5. Web site: Segalman Receives APS Dillon Medal. 2020-08-22. today.lbl.gov.
  6. Web site: Cleave. Vicki. 2013-03-13. Mahesh Mahanthappa wins 2013 Dillon Medal. 2020-08-22. Advanced Science News. en-US.
  7. Web site: anonymous. Chinedum Osuji Awarded 2015 John H. Dillon Medal. 2020-08-22. Yale School of Engineering & Applied Science. en.
  8. Web site: Engineering honors. 2020-08-22. UDaily.
  9. Web site: Medal honors polymer scientist for illuminating the nature of materials Chemical and Biological Engineering. 2020-08-22. cbe.princeton.edu.
  10. Web site: News : CEMS : University of Minnesota. 2021-01-28. www.cems.umn.edu.
  11. https://www.aps.org/programs/honors/prizes/prizerecipient.cfm?last_nm=Qin&first_nm=Jian&year=2022
  12. https://www.aps.org/programs/honors/prizes/prizerecipient.cfm?last_nm=Sharma&first_nm=Vivek&year=2023