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The Chemical Institute of Canada is a Canadian professional umbrella organization for researchers and professionals in the field of chemistry.It was founded in 1921 as the Canadian Institute of Chemistry until it merged with other groups in 1945 under its current name.
The Chemical Institute of Canada Medal or CIC Medal is the highest award that the Chemical Institute of Canada confers. Awarded annually since 1951, it is given to "a person who has made an outstanding contribution to the science of chemistry or chemical engineering in Canada". [1]
Chao-Jun "C.-J." Li, a Canadian chemist, is E. B. Eddy Professor of Chemistry and Canada Research Chair in Green Chemistry at McGill University, Montréal.He is known for his pioneering works in Green Solvent (organic reactions in water) and Green Syntheses (water/functional group-tolerating organometallics, C-H activation, and photochemistry).
Kim Baines PhD FRSC FRSC is a professor of organic chemistry at the University of Western Ontario.In 2022 she was elected as a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada. [1] She was the inaugural chair of the DEI working group of the Chemical Institute of Canada. [2]
Phillips was elected as a Fellow of the Chemical Institute of Canada in 1990. She became a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, in the 2008 class of fellows, "for distinguished service to the engineering profession, and for her role as a pioneering woman in the profession and as a mentor to female engineers".
Canadian Society for Chemical Technology (CSCT) Canadian Society of Clinical Chemists - (CSCC) Chemical Abstracts Service (CAS) Chemical Heritage Foundation (CHF), now the Science History Institute; Chemical Institute of Canada (CIC) Chemical Society Located in Taipei (CSLT) Chemical Society of Japan (CSJ) Crystallographic Society of Japan (CSJ)
James Watson Bain (14 November 1875 – 23 January 1964) was a Canadian chemist at the University of Toronto.He is known as one of the founders of the first Canadian chemical society, the Canadian section of the Society of Chemical Industry, and as the first president of the Chemical Institute of Canada.
Gunning's focuses were on chemical kinetics and photochemistry. He did much research in these areas and published over 175 research papers on these areas of chemistry. He became president of the Chemical Institute of Canada in 1973 and remained there until 1974. He was active in provincial, municipal, and federal commissions and boards, one of ...