NSERC Prizes

Prize

NSERC John C. Polanyi Award

Created in 2006, the NSERC John C. Polanyi Award recognizes an individual or team whose research conducted in Canada has led to a recent outstanding advance in the natural sciences or engineering. The award is open to all researchers at any career stage.

The award includes a research grant of up to $250,000, which is paid in three annual instalments. Research grant funds paid to recipients of this award are subject to the Tri-agency Guide on Financial Administration.

John Charles Polanyi

John Charles Polanyi was born in 1929 to Hungarian parents who moved their family to England in 1933. Dr. Polanyi trained at Manchester University, where he received his BSc and, in 1952, his PhD.

From 1952 to 1954, he was a postdoctoral fellow at the National Research Council Canada Laboratories in Ottawa; and from 1954 to 1956, he was a Research Associate at Princeton University. In 1956, Dr. Polanyi began teaching chemistry at the University of Toronto, where he is still an active faculty member. His research is on the molecular motions in chemical reactions in gases and at surfaces.

Dr. Polanyi made Canada proud when he won the 1986 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, alongside his fellow researchers, Drs. Dudley R. Herschbach, Harvard University and Yuan T. Lee, University of California at Berkeley. Thirty years prior, Dr. Polanyi had begun his ground-breaking work documenting the energy status and movements of molecules at the very moment of chemical reaction. Through his astonishing molecular beam and infrared chemiluminescence experiments, he clarified chemical dynamics right down to the level of atoms and molecules. Not only have his discoveries dramatically advanced the understanding of the physics of chemical reactions, but they have also led to the development of powerful new lasers. Today, Dr. Polanyi is contributing his expertise to several areas of research, most notably in nanotechnology.

His awards include the Royal Medal of the Royal Society of London and some 30 honorary degrees from six countries.

Dr. Polanyi is a Fellow of the Royal Societies of Canada, London and Edinburgh, and of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the U.S. National Academy of Sciences, the Pontifical Academy of Rome and the Russian Academy of Sciences. Dr. Polanyi is also a member of the Queen's Privy Council for Canada, and a Companion of the Order of Canada.

Dr. Polanyi has served on the Prime Minister of Canada's Advisory Board on Science and Technology and the Premier's Council of Ontario. He has also served as Foreign Honorary Advisor to the Institute for Molecular Sciences, Japan; as Honorary Advisor to the Max Planck Institute for Quantum Optics, Germany; and on the Board of the Steacie Institute for Molecular Sciences, Canada.

Dr. Polanyi's brilliance in science is complemented by a wide range of interests and a keen social conscience. He is a founding member of both the Committee on Scholarly Freedom of the Royal Society and the Canadian Committee for Scientists and Scholars, a human rights organization of which he is President.

Dr. Polanyi has been active for 40 years in International Pugwash, a global movement of scientists and others with a professional concern about the social impact of science and seeking ways to prevent its misuse. He helped to found the Canadian Pugwash Group in 1960, serving as its first chairman. Dr. Polanyi has written extensively on science policy, the control of armaments and peacekeeping. He co-edited The Dangers of Nuclear War, and participated in the Canada 21 study of a 21st-century defence posture for Canada. He co-chaired the Department of Foreign Affairs International Consultative Committee on a Rapid Response Capability for the United Nations.

The NSERC John C. Polanyi Award celebrates the research excellence exemplified by Dr. Polanyi during his remarkable career as well as the outstanding contributions he continues to make to science and society.

Call for nominations
Current winner
Recent winners
University of TorontoInstitute of Biomedical Engineering

Milica Radisic, a professor in biomedical engineering and Canada Research Chair in Organ-on-a-Chip Engineering at the University of Toronto, is pioneering groundbreaking advances in organ-on-a-chip technology. Her research aims to revolutionize drug testing and tissue engineering by creating…

Queen’s UniversityDepartment of Chemistry

Dr. Cathleen Crudden is a world-leading scientist whose research on the use of organic coatings to modify metal surfaces has garnered international recognition. Her work developing organic ligands for metal surfaces has been transformative not only in her field of chemistry, but also in physics and…

McGill UniversityDepartment of Chemistry

Solvents account for a significant proportion of waste in chemical-based industries and their elimination remains one of the holy grails of sustainable chemistry. An alternative methodology for clean, solvent‑free chemical synthesis and manufacturing is taking hold thanks to Pr. Tomislav Friščić. He…

McGill UniversityDepartment of Chemistry

Breakthrough innovations developed by Prof. Hanadi Sleiman and her team at McGill University have transformed the field of DNA nanotechnology and paved the way to a revolution in medical treatments for major diseases. The Sleiman group created a unique class of DNA nanostructures to be used as drug…

2025|Jeremy Quastel
University of Toronto-Department of Computer Science and Mathematics
2024|Milica Radisic
University of Toronto-Institute of Biomedical Engineering
2023|Cathleen Crudden
Queen’s University-Department of Chemistry
2022|Tomislav Friščić
McGill University-Department of Chemistry
2021|Hanadi Sleiman
McGill University-Department of Chemistry
2020|Karen Maxwell
University of Toronto-Department of Biochemistry
2019|Douglas Stephan
University of Toronto-Department of Chemistry
2018|Michael Organ
University of Ottawa-Department of Chemistry and Biomolecular Sciences
2017|Sylvain Moineau
Université Laval-Department of Biochemistry, Université Laval-Department of Microbiology, Université Laval-Department of Bioinformatics
2016|Dr. Barbara Sherwood Lollar
University of Toronto-Department of Earth Sciences
2015|Dr. Chris Eliasmith
University of Waterloo-Centre for Theoretical Neuroscience
2013|ALPHA-Canada Team
2012|Greg Scholes
University of Toronto-Department of Chemistry
2011|Benjamin Blencowe
University of Toronto-Faculty of Medicine
2011|Brendan Frey
University of Toronto-Department of Engineering

For more information, please contact:

Email: polanyi@nserc-crsng.gc.ca