Women in chemistry

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

This is a list of women chemists. It should include those who have been important to the development or practice of chemistry. Their research or application has made significant contributions in the area of basic or applied chemistry.

Nobel Laureates[1]

Eight women have won the

Venkatraman Ramakrishnan and Thomas A. Steitz for the study of the structure and function of the ribosome. Emmanuelle Charpentier and Jennifer A Doudna won the 2020 prize in chemistry “for the development of a method for genome editing.”[2] Charpentier and Doudna are the first women to share the Nobel Prize in chemistry.[3]

Wolf Laureates

Three women have been awarded the Wolf Prize in Chemistry, they are:

  • 2006 – Ada Yonath "for ingenious structural discoveries of the ribosomal machinery of peptide-bond formation and the light-driven primary processes in photosynthesis.[4]
  • 2022 –
    Carolyn R. Bertozzi "for their seminal contributions to understanding the chemistry of cellular communication and inventing chemical methodologies to study the role of carbohydrates, lipids, and proteins in such biological processes."[5]

Chemical elements

In the periodic table of elements, two chemical elements are named after a female scientist:

List of women chemists

The following list is split into the centuries when the majority of the scientist's work was performed. The scientist's listed may be born and perform work outside of the century they are listed under.

19th century

  • Mary Watson (1856–1933), one of the first two female chemistry students at the University of Oxford
  • Margaret Seward (1864–1929), one of the first two female chemistry students at the University of Oxford; signed the 1904 petition to the Chemical Society
  • Vera Bogdanovskaia
    (1868–1897), one of the first female Russian chemists
  • Gerty Cori (1896–1957) Jewish Czech-American biochemist who was the first American to win a Nobel Prize in science
  • Margot Dorenfeldt (1895–1986) First woman to graduate from Norwegian Institute of Technology (1919)
  • Ida Freund (1863–1914), first woman to be a university chemistry lecturer in the United Kingdom
  • Ellen Gleditsch (1879–1968), Norwegian radiochemist; Norway's second female professor
  • Louise Hammarström (1849–1917), Swedish mineral chemist, first formally educated female Swedish chemist
  • Edith Humphrey (1875–1978), Inorganic chemist, probably the first British woman to gain a doctorate in chemistry
  • Julia Lermontova (1846–1919), Russian chemist, first Russian female doctorate in chemistry
  • Laura Linton
    (1853–1915), American chemist, teacher, and physician
  • Rachel Lloyd (1839–1900), First American female to earn a doctorate in chemistry, first regularly admitted female member of the American Chemical Society, studied sugar beets
  • Muriel Wheldale Onslow
    (1880–1932), British biochemist
  • Marie Pasteur (1826–1910), French chemist and bacteriologist
  • Mary Engle Pennington (1872–1952), American chemist
  • Agnes Pockels (1862–1935), German chemist
  • Anna Sundström (1785–1871), Swedish chemist
  • Clara Immerwahr (1870–1915), First woman to get her doctorate in chemistry in Germany
  • Ellen Swallow Richards (1842–1911), American industrial and environmental chemist
  • Anna Volkova (1800–1876), Russian chemist
  • Nadezhda Olimpievna Ziber-Shumova
    (died 1914), Russian chemist
  • Fanny Rysan Mulford Hitchcock (1851–1936), one of thirteen (American) women to graduate with a degree in chemistry in the 1800s, and the first to graduate with a doctorate in philosophy of chemistry. Her areas of focus were in entomology, fish osteology, and plant pathology.[6]

20th century

21st century

See also

References

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  2. ^ "2020 Nobel Prizes Honor Three Women in Science". AIP Publishing LLC. Retrieved 2021-07-01.
  3. ^ "Two women share chemistry Nobel in historic win for 'genetic scissors'". BBC News. 2020-10-07. Retrieved 2021-07-01.
  4. ^ "Ada Yonath". Wolf Foundation. 2018-12-11. Retrieved 2023-10-10.
  5. ^ "Bonnie L. Bassler". Wolf Foundation. 2022-02-08. Retrieved 2023-10-10.
  6. .
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  21. ^ "Jeanne Hardy | Department of Chemistry | UMass Amherst". www.umass.edu. Retrieved 2024-02-27.
  22. ^ "HotSpot Therapeutics Completes $45 Million Series A Financing to Advance New Approach to Allosteric Drug Discovery". prnewswire.com. Retrieved 2024-03-02.
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