The Martin Medal is an award given for outstanding contributions to the advancement of separation science.[1] The award is presented by The Chromatographic Society, a UK-based organization promoting all aspects of chromatography and related separation techniques.[2] The award is named after Professor Archer J.P Martin, who contributed to the invention of partition chromatography, and shared the 1952 Nobel Prize in Chemistry.[3]

Award winners

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Past winners of the Martin Medal are:[4]

  • Robert Kennedy (2019)
  • Jean-Luc Veuthey (2018)
  • Andreas Manz (2017)
  • Ian Wilson & Peter Myers (2016)
  • Pavel Jandera (2015)
  • Nobuo Tanaka (2014)
  • Günther Bonn & Frantisek Svec (2013)
  • Edward S. Yeung (2012)
  • Peter J. Schoenmakers (2011)
  • Peter Carr (2010)
  • Wolfgang F. Lindner (2009)
  • Ron Majors & Johan Roeraade (2007)
  • Jim Waters (2006)
  • Vadim A. Davankov (2005)
  • Terry Berger (2004)
  • Jack Henion (2003)
  • Paul R. Haddad & Werner Engewald (2002)
  • John Michael Ramsey (2001)
  • Klaus Mosbach & William S. Hancock (2000)
  • Hans Poppe & Geoffrey Eglinton, FRS (1999)
  • Albert Zlatkis (1998, awarded posthumously)
  • Will Jennings & Joseph Jack Kirkland (1997)
  • Milton L. Lee (1996)
  • Milos Novotny & Shigeru Terabe (1995)
  • Pat Sandra & Csaba Horvath (1994)
  • Hans Engelhardt, Fred E. Regnier, & Klaus K. Unger (1993)
  • Irving Wainer & James W. Jorgenson (1992)
  • Dai E. Games, Barry L. Karger, Daniel W. Armstrong, & Dennis H. Desty (1991)
  • Egil Jellum, William Pirkle, & Carl A. Cramers (1990)
  • Jon Calvin Giddings, Udo. A Th Brinkman, J. F. K. Huber, Rudolf E. Kaiser, & Lloyd R. Snyder (1986)
  • Ervin Kovats & John Knox (1985)
  • C. E. Roland Jones & Arnaldo L. Liberti (1984)
  • Gerhard Schomburg & Ralph Stock (1983)
  • Edward R. Adlard, Leslie S. Ettre, Courtney S. G. Phillips, & Raymond P. W. Scott (1982)
  • G. A. Peter Tuey & Georges Guiochon (1980)
  • Ernst Bayer & C. E. H. Knapman (1978)

References

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  1. ^ "Martin Medal". ChromSoc.
  2. ^ "About". ChromSoc.
  3. ^ "The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1952". NobelPrize.org.
  4. ^ "List of The Chromatographic Society Medal Winners" (PDF). ChromSoc. Retrieved 18 December 2019.