Royal Society of Chemistry Sir Geoffrey Wilkinson Dalton Poster Symposium 2021

Between 29 June to 1 July 2021, the Royal Society of Chemistry Sir Geoffrey Wilkinson Dalton Poster Competition took place online as part of the Dalton Joint Interest Group meeting. Whilst this event was on hold in 2020 because of the Covid-19 pandemic, we were delighted that the competition was able to resume, albeit in a virtual format.
The posters were distributed across four themes: Coordination and Organometallic Chemistry; Main Group Chemistry; Inorganic Reaction Mechanisms; Inorganic Biochemistry.

A judging committee reviewed the posters and selected winners across the four themes, as well as an overall winner up in the PhD and postdoc categories. The winners were announced by the Dalton Division President, Professor Robert Mulvey, during the conferences closing remarks and the winners all received a PDF certificate and bursary. 354 people attended  the online event this year, with 61 posters being presented at the Symposium.

The following chemists won prizes this year:

PhD Category

Winner: Natalia Baranska,University of York
Runner-up: Leah Webster, Imperial College London

PostDoc Category

Winner: Debanjana Biswal, University of Calcutta
Runner-up: Laurence Doyle, University of York

Inorganic Reaction Mechanisms

Winner: Patrick Morgan, University of Nottingham

Coordination and Organometallic Chemistry

Winner: Rebecca Salthouse, Durham University

Inorganic Biochemistry

Winner: Silvia Schoch, University of Pisa

Main Group Chemistry

Winner: Alexander Beaton Garcia, University of Edinburgh

Wednesday 14th July, 2021. 100th anniversary of the birth of Sir Geoffrey Wilkinson

Geoffrey Wilkinson was born on 14th July, 1921. The Trustees of the foundation honour him with great affection.

As a result of his generosity and highly successful life, especially in terms of publishing ( Advanced Inorganic Chemistry and Basic Inorganic Chemistry written with F. A. Cotton and later others) contact with industry (especially with Johnson Matthey through rhodium phosphine catalysed hydroformylation), the Foundation is able to fund a variety of ongoing and one off projects as well as make charitable donations.

Amongst the current ongoing projects are, a studentship in inorganic chemistry at Imperial College, currently held by Filip Aniés,  the Sir Christopher Dobson PhD studentship in Protein Folding, and a PhD studentship in the History of Medicine at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. The last two studentships are expected to start in late 2021. In addition, the Foundation funds the annual  Sor Geoffrey Wilkinson Dalton Poster Competition in collaboration with the Dalton Division of the Royal Society of Chemistry and the European Network of Young Chemists’ biennial Chemistry Rediscovered. The Sir Geoffrey Wilkinson EYCN Video Competition.

We shall be thinking especially of Sir Geoffrey (Geoff) today with great gratitude and affection.

Barry Lock†

It is with deep regret that we announce that one of the Foundation’s longest serving Trustees has recently died. Barry Lock was Sir Geoffrey Wilkinson’s personal solicitor and was involved in setting up the Foundation. He retained a deep interest in the workings of the Foundation in both managing the finances and approving projects until his peaceful death in April, 2021. He has had a major influence on the Foundation and will be sorely missed.

Chemistry Rediscovered – The Sir Geoffrey Wikinson EYCN Video Competition

Promotional image for the Wilkinson EYCN Video Competition, 2021

Following the great success of the European Young Chemists’ Network (EYCN) Video competition in 2019 Chemistry Rediscovered – In your Element, which the foundation sponsored. The Wilkinson Charitable Foundation has agreed to become the permanent sponsor of the video competition, now to be called: Chemistry Rediscovered – The Sir Geoffrey Wikinson EYCN Video Competition. 

This year the subject will be Safety in Chemistry. For all information and a submission form please visit:

 EuChemS EYCN Contests – EuChemS

Videos submitted to the 2019 competition can be found on YouTube at: ‘Chemistry Rediscovered 2019 – In Your Element’

Professor Sir Christopher Dobson PhD Scholarship in Protein Misfolding

Sir Christopher Dobson, former Master of St John’s College, Cambridge, was and a Trustee of the Wilkinson Charitable Foundation and an outstanding researcher in the area of protein folding. This work is leading to new approaches to the treatment of diseases of ageing such as Alzheimer’s disease. In order to help ensure that this important work continues, the Foundation has endowed a PhD studentship at St John’s College in memory of Sir Christopher.  It is anticipated that the first student to be funded through this studentship should start work later in 2021.

Full details are available at the St John’s website:

St John’s Cambridge: Scholarship in Protein Misfolding

Sir Geoffrey Wilkinson Prizes; Global Inorganic Discussion Weekend

During the Covid-19 pandemic, face to face conferences have not been possible. However, on-line conferences and poster competitions have been flourishing. The Foundation funded prizes for the Global Inorganic discussion weekend on-line poster competition.

The event was a major success attracting 165 participants from 20 countries, and 50 judges from around the world. The tweets accrued 7600+ likes, 1000s of retweets, offered a social reach of 18,000+ people, and trended 4th in Canada on the morning of July 9th! 

The winners of the Sir Geoffrey Wilkinson Prizes are pictured below. Many congratulations to all of them and to the organisers led by Marcus Drover, University of Windsor, Ontario, Canada.

Geofrey Wilkinson Prize Winners 2020.
The Sir Geofrey Wilkinson Prize Winners 2020.

Sir Christopher Dobson†, FRS

It is with deep sadness that we report the death, on Sunday 8th September 2019, of Sir Christopher Dobson, FRS, a Trustee of the Wilkinson Charitable Foundation.

Chris Dobson was born in Germany in October 1949 to parents who were stationed there with the British Army. It was his father’s military career that led him to spend some of his youth abroad in countries including Nigeria. Chris was educated in the UK first at Hereford Cathedral Junior School then at Abington School.

BSc and PhD Degrees at Oxford were followed by Fellowships in Oxford and a short spell in Harvard before returning to a Lectureship in Chemistry at Oxford and Fellowship of Lady Margaret Hall. He quickly rose through the ranks being appointed Professor in 1996, the year he was also elected a Fellow of the Royal Society. Chris Dobson built a strong and world leading group in Oxford before moving to Cambridge as John Humphrey Plummer Professor of Chemical and Structural Biology (2001), subsequently becoming Master of St John’s College in 2007. Chris Dobson founded the Cambridge Centre for Misfolding Diseases in 2012 and cofounded Wren Therapeutics, a spin-out company, in 2016. He was knighted in the Birthday Honours, 2018.

Most of Chris Dobson’s research concerned studies, mainly using NMR methods, of how proteins fold and misfold. He postulated that misfolding can lead to disease states and discovered that, under some circumstances, proteins can spontaneously degrade into amyloid plaques. Since amyloid plaques are found in brains of people who have died from Alzheimer’s disease, it appeared that there might be a clear connection between protein misfolding and Alzheimer’s disease.  Much of the recent work of Chris’s group has involved obtaining a detailed understanding of how proteins misfold and how that misfolding can be reversed or interrupted. The group has made remarkable progress and the possibility of a cure for Alzheimer’s and related diseases has become much closer as a result of their pioneering studies. Wren Pharmaceuticals has been set up to exploit these findings and to develop therapeutic agents arising from them. Chris Dobson authored around 900 publications with an h index of >130 and around 5000 citations per year. Aside for his Fellowship of the Royal Society and Knighthood, Chris Dobson has been awarded accolades from countries as diverse as India, Italy, Belgium, the Netherlands, Sweden, Ireland, German and the United States. Amongst his many UK medals and prizes are both the Davy and Royal Medals of the Royal Society.

Sir Christopher Dobson supervised and mentored a very large number of postgraduate students and postdoctoral fellows, showing that balance of total academic integrity and rigour with compassion and humanity that is the mark of an outstanding supervisor. He also employed these skills to be a much loved and highly successful Master of St. John’s College Cambridge.

Chris Dobson became a Trustee of the Wilkinson Charitable Foundation about 3 years ago bringing a deep knowledge of Chemistry and very significant financial experience. He has helped steer the Foundation towards the funding of many chemistry related projects always offering advice with great charm and tact.

Chris Dobson is survived by his wife Mary, formerly Director of the Wellcome Unit for the History of Medicine in Oxford and their two sons, Richard and William. He touched the lives of everyone he met and will be very sorely missed by so many.

David Cole-Hamilton
16th September, 2019


Photo: Jussi Puikkonen/KNAWKNAW Koninklijke Nederlandse Akademie van Wetenschappen [CC BY 2.0], via Wikimedia Commons

Oldest printed periodic table finds a new home

Oldest printed Periodic Table Wallchart hanging in Burlington House.

The world’s oldest printed Periodic Table Walchart, printed in 1885, finds a new home on the wall at Burlington House. It is the first time it has been seen in public for over 100 years. The Foundation funded its transport to Burlington House from St Andrews. It is hanging alongside the EuChemS Periodic Table showing element scarcity. The picture was taken at the Royal Society of Chemistry Summer Party (2019).