UNIST Professor Receives Prestigious Feynman Prize in Nanotechnology

Prof. Bartosz A. Grzybowski, Winner of the 2016 Foresight Institute Feynman Prize for Theory. Recognized for his outstanding and many contributions on computer-assisted organic synthesis.

For his pioneering research in computer-assisted organic synthesis, Bartosz A. Grzybowski at Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology (UNIST), South Korea, has been honored with the 2016 Foresight Institute Feynman Prize for theoretical nanotechnology, by the California think tank dedicated to the beneficial implementation of nanotechnology.

Prof. Bartosz A. Grzybowski is a distinguished Professor of Nanoscience and Bioengineering in the Department of Chemistry at UNIST. He is a Group Leader in the Center for Soft and Living Matter at the Institute for Basic Science (IBS), as well as a professor at the Polish Academy of Sciences in Warsaw. The award is in recognition of his outstanding contributions to the field of research on computer-assisted organic synthesis.

Prof. Grzybowski’s research focuses on computer-assisted organic synthesis. This award recognizes him for developing a database of all known organic chemical compounds and the ways that they react together. This artificial intelligence software, called Chematica uses algorithms and a collective database of 250 years of organic chemical information to predict and provide synthesis pathways for molecules. This one giant network of organic chemistry has the potential to enhance a chemist’s quest for drug discovery and other industrially important chemicals.

When asked about what receiving this award had meant to him, Prof. Grzybowski said, “I am truly honored by this recognition, and this is a tribute to the many students, postdocs, and colleagues who have helped me achieve my goals.” He adds, “Chematica allows chemists to focus their knowledge and creativity on harder questions by making the synthetic process shorter and way more economical. I hope it can provide answers to previously and currently unsolved problems in chemistry.”

The prize, first awarded in 1993, is an award given by the Foresight Institute every year to an individual whose recent work has most advanced the achievement of Feynman’s goal for nanotechnology, as exemplified by the late physicist Richard P. Feynman. It is given in two categories of nanotechnology, one for experiment and the other for theory.

The institute awarded a second Feynman Prize for experimental nanotechnology to Chair Prof. Franz J. Giessibl of the Institute of Experimental and Applied Physics in the Department of Physics, University of Regensburg, Germany for his contributions to the fields of research on tip structure and atomic manipulation in scanning probe microscopy.