British chemist
Rachel O'Reilly FRS FRSC is a British chemist and Professor at the University of Birmingham . She works at the interface of biology and materials, creating polymers that can mimic natural nanomaterials such as viruses and cells. She is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry and of the Royal Society .
Education
O'Reilly was born in Holywood and educated in a grammar school.[ 1] [ 2] She has dyslexia.[ 3] She studied Natural Sciences at the University of Cambridge , working with Brian F. G. Johnson on her Master's project, and graduated in 1999.[ 1] She moved to Imperial College London to work with Vernon C. Gibson on catalyst design, earning a PhD in 2003.[ 1]
Career
O'Reilly joined Craig Hawker and Karen L. Wooley at Washington University in St. Louis .[ 4] Here she demonstrated the fabrication of cross-linked polymer nanoparticles that were Click-ready .[ 5] [ 4] O'Reilly was awarded a 2004 Royal Commission for the Exhibition of 1851 fellowship, and took up a research fellowship at Downing College, Cambridge , in 2005.[ 6] [ 7] At the University of Cambridge she was awarded a Royal Society Dorothy Hodgkin fellowship.[ 8] She developed hollow polymeric nanocages that could selectively recognise substrates.[ 9]
She joined the University of Warwick in 2009 as an Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council career-acceleration fellow.[ 6] [ 8] [ 10] Her fellowship explored water-soluble responsive polymer scaffolds that contained domains for catalysis as well as responsive polymers that could trigger the release of catalysts into the media surrounding them.[ 10] She was appointed Professor in 2012 at the age of 34.[ 11] [ 12] That year she was the first ever UK winner of the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry Samsung Young Polymer Scientist prize.[ 12] [ 13] She appeared on Start the Week with Andrew Marr in 2012, where he described her as a "a chemist who does strange things with plastics".[ 2] In 2013 she was awarded the American Chemical Society Hermann Mark Young Scholar award.[ 14] [ 15] She was appointed Professor of Chemistry at the University of Birmingham in 2017.[ 1] [ 16]
Alongside her research, O'Reilly is a keen geologist and enjoys travelling to volcanoes.[ 2] She became a Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry in 2013 and was named as one of the Royal Society of Chemistry 's 175's Faces of Chemistry.[ 3] [ 1] In 2023 she was elected an Honorary Fellow of Downing College, Cambridge.[ 7]
Honours and awards
References
^ a b c d e f "Professor Rachel O'Reilly staff profile, School of Chemistry – University of Birmingham" . www.birmingham.ac.uk . Retrieved 19 May 2018 .
^ a b c "In profile: Professor Rachel O'Reilly" . EPSRC . 2013. Archived from the original on 20 May 2018.
^ a b "Professor Rachel O'Reilly FRSC | 175 Faces of Chemistry" . www.rsc.org . Archived from the original on 23 September 2020.
^ a b O'Reilly, Rachel K.; Joralemon, Maisie J.; Hawker, Craig J.; Wooley, Karen L. (2007). "Preparation of orthogonally-functionalized core Click cross-linked nanoparticles". New J. Chem . 31 (5): 718– 724. doi :10.1039/B616103K . ISSN 1144-0546 .
^ O'Reilly, Rachel K.; Joralemon, Maisie J.; Hawker, Craig J.; Wooley, Karen L. (2006). "Facile syntheses of surface-functionalized micelles and shell cross-linked nanoparticles". Journal of Polymer Science Part A: Polymer Chemistry . 44 (17): 5203– 5217. Bibcode :2006JPoSA..44.5203O . doi :10.1002/pola.21602 . ISSN 0887-624X .
^ a b Gibson, Matthew I.; O'Reilly, Rachel K. (9 April 2013). "To aggregate, or not to aggregate? considerations in the design and application of polymeric thermally-responsive nanoparticles" . Chem. Soc. Rev . 42 (17): 7204– 7213. doi :10.1039/C3CS60035A . ISSN 0306-0012 . PMID 23571466 .
^ a b "Four new Honorary Fellows elected" . Downing College, Cambridge . 19 May 2023. Retrieved 9 October 2023 .
^ a b Sanderson, Katharine (6 June 2012). "Turning point: Rachel O'Reilly" . Nature . 486 (7401): 149. doi :10.1038/nj7401-149a . ISSN 0028-0836 .
^ Ievins, Alexander D.; Moughton, Adam O.; O'Reilly, Rachel K. (2008). "Synthesis of Hollow Responsive Functional Nanocages Using a Metal–Ligand Complexation Strategy". Macromolecules . 41 (10): 3571– 3578. Bibcode :2008MaMol..41.3571I . doi :10.1021/ma800047r . ISSN 0024-9297 .
^ a b author, EPSRC. "Grants on the web" . Retrieved 19 May 2018 .
^ "Rachel O'Reilly – EPSRC website" . epsrc.ukri.org . Retrieved 19 May 2018 .
^ a b "Chemistry International – Newsmagazine for IUPAC" . www.iupac.org . Retrieved 19 May 2018 .
^ a b "POLY – Division Awards" . www.polyacs.org . Archived from the original on 20 May 2018. Retrieved 19 May 2018 .
^ Polymer .
^ a b "ROR wins an ACS award" . www.birmingham.ac.uk . Retrieved 19 May 2018 .
^ "Professor Andrew Dove and Professor Rachel O'Reilly to join School of Chemistry in early 2018" . www.birmingham.ac.uk . Retrieved 19 May 2018 .
^ "Outstanding scientists elected as Fellows and Foreign Members of the Royal Society" . Royal Society . 10 May 2022. Retrieved 11 May 2022 .
^ "Our 2020 prize and award winners" . Royal Society of Chemistry . Retrieved 24 June 2020 .
^ "2018 Journal of Polymer Science Innovation Award Winner: Dr. Rachel O'Reilly – PMSE" . pmsedivision.org . 13 May 2018. Retrieved 19 May 2018 .
^ "RSC Gibson-Fawcett Award 2016 Winner" . www.rsc.org . Retrieved 19 May 2018 .
^ Darton, Nicholas. "Colloid & Surface Science Group – Past Meetings" . www.colloidsgroup.org.uk . Retrieved 19 May 2018 .
^ "Hickinbottom Award 2012 Winner" . www.rsc.org . Retrieved 19 May 2018 .
^ "2007 winner of the RSC Harrison-Meldola Prize" . www.rsc.org . Retrieved 19 May 2018 .