Wolf Prize in Chemistry

The Wolf Prize in Chemistry is awarded annually by the Wolf Foundation in Israel.It is one of the six Wolf Prizes established by the Foundation and awarded since 1978; the others are in Agriculture, Mathematics, Medicine, Physics and Arts.[1] Becoming a Wolf Prize laureate has been viewed as a potential precursor to receiving the Nobel Prize.[2] As of 2022, 12 awardees have subsequently become Nobel laureates; the most recent of those is Carolyn Bertozzi, who received the Nobel Prize the same year.Some laureates are counted more than once if they have multiple citizenships.
Wolf FoundationIsraelWolf PrizesAgricultureMathematicsMedicinePhysicsNobel Prize in ChemistryCarolyn BertozziCarl DjerassiAustriaHerman MarkHenry EyringMexicoJoseph ChattUnited KingdomJohn Charles PolanyiHungaryCanadaGeorge C. PimentelUnited StatesHerbert S. GutowskyHarden M. McConnellJohn S. WaughRudolph A. MarcusElias James CoreyAlbert EschenmoserSwitzerlandDavid C. PhillipsDavid M. BlowJoshua JortnerRaphael David LevineDuilio ArigoniAlan R. BattersbyRichard R. ErnstAlexander PinesRhodesiaJohn PopleAhmed Hassan ZewailRichard LernerPeter SchultzGilbert StorkSamuel J. DanishefskyGerhard ErtlGabor A. SomorjaiGermanyRaymond U. LemieuxFrank Albert CottonHenri B. KaganRyōji NoyoriK. Barry SharplessFranceHarry B. GrayRichard N. ZareAda YonathGeorge FeherWilliam E. MoernerAllen J. BardStuart A. RiceChing W. TangKrzysztof MatyjaszewskiPolandA. Paul AlivisatosCharles M. LieberRobert S. LangerChi-Huey WongTaiwanKyriacos Costa NicolaouCyprusStuart SchreiberRobert G. BergmanOmar M. YaghiJordanMakoto FujitaStephen L. BuchwaldJohn F. HartwigLeslie LeiserowitzMeir LahavBonnie L. BasslerCarolyn R. BertozziBenjamin F. CravattChuan HeHiroaki SugaJeffery W. KellyList of chemistry awardsIREG Observatory on Academic Ranking and ExcellenceWolf Foundation PrizesDavid BlowAhmed ZewailRaymond LemieuxF. Albert CottonChing Wan TangPaul AlivisatosK. C. Nicolaou