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BunsenKirchhoff Award 1/1 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BunsenKirchhoff_Award reference science, encyclopedia 2026-05-05T11:21:14.450592+00:00 kb-cron

The BunsenKirchhoff Award is a prize for "outstanding achievements" in the field of analytical spectroscopy. It has been awarded since 1990 by the German Working Group for Applied Spectroscopy, and is endowed with €2,500 by PerkinElmer, Germany. The prize is named in honor of chemist Robert Bunsen and physicist Gustav Kirchhoff.

== Prizewinners ==

1990 Günter Snatzke, Germany 1991 Hannes Aiginger, Austria; Peter Wobrauschek, Austria; Joachim Knoth, Germany; Heinrich Schwenke, Germany 1992 Kurt Laqua, Germany; Arnulf Röseler, Germany 1993 Boris L'vov, Russia 1994 D. Bruce Chase, United States; W. J. Orville-Thomas, Great Britain 1995 Paul W.J.M. Boumans, Netherlands 1998 Annemie Bogaerts, Belgium 2000 Dieter Fischer, Germany 2001 John A. McLean, United States 2002 Jürgen Popp, Germany 2003 Sergei Boulyga, Germany 2004 Ewa Bulska, Poland 2005 Nicolas Bings, Germany 2006 Volker Deckert, Germany 2007 Jörg Bettmer, Germany 2008 Sebastian Schlücke, Germany 2009 Joachim Koch, Switzerland 2010 Janina Kneipp, Germany 2011 Daniel Pröfrock, Germany 2012 Christoph Haisch, Germany 2013 Maria Montes-Bayón, Spain 2014 Oliver Reich, Germany 2015 Martín Resano, Spain 2016 Torsten Frosch, Germany 2017 Jacob T. Shelley, United States 2018 Zsuzsanna Heiner, Hungary 2020 Natalia P. Ivleva 2022 Carlos Abad Andrade 2024 Björn Meermann

== In popular culture == The Steely Dan song "What a Shame About Me" from the album Two Against Nature mentions that an old acquaintance, "won the Bunsen Prize".

== See also == List of chemistry awards

== References ==