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/Otto Stern Prize

HomepageOtto Stern Prize
Otto Stern Prize of the GDCh Magnetic Resonance Division

In 2020, the GDCh Magnetic Resonance Division established the Otto Stern Award to honour the memory of Otto Stern, whose work on the detection of spin quantization created the fundamental prerequisites for the use of magnetic resonance, and to pay tribute to the professional life's work of internationally outstanding personalities in the field of magnetic resonance. The award is presented at irregular intervals, at most once a year. It includes an award certificate, a trophy and invitations to a keynote speech at the specialist group conference and to a festive dinner. The awarding of the prize is decided by a committee appointed by the Executive Committee of the Specialist Group.

Guidelines for awarding the Otto Stern Prize

Current call for entries: Otto Stern Prize 2026

Submission deadline: 5 January 2026

Objective
Since 2020, the GDCh Magnetic Resonance Division has been awarding the Otto Stern Prize at irregular intervals, at most once a year, to honour the professional life's work of internationally outstanding personalities in the field of magnetic resonance. The prize is awarded in memory of Otto Stern, whose work on the detection of spin quantisation laid the foundations for the use of magnetic resonance.

The prize
The award comes with an award certificate, a trophy and an invitation to a festive dinner. The award ceremony will take place during the 47th FGMR Annual Discussion Meeting (14-17 September 2026 in Mainz). Following the award ceremony, the prizewinner will give a keynote speech. The awarding of the prize will be decided by the Executive Committee of the Specialist Group.

Nomination
Nominations can be made by persons who have made extraordinary scientific contributions to magnetic resonance in their life's work. All members of the specialist group are entitled to make nominations; self-nominations are not possible. All nominations consist of an informal acknowledgement of special professional merits and a curriculum vitae (including contact details). Each nomination will be considered for the current call year and two subsequent years.

Submission
Please send all proposals electronically and summarised in a PDF file to the GDCh office for the attention of Maike Fries.

Otto Stern Prize 2025

The Magnetic Resonance Section of the German Chemical Society awarded the Otto Stern Prize 2025 to Prof. Dr Paul Heitjans on 18 September 2025 in Bonn:

"In recognition of his fundamental work on ion dynamics and diffusion in solids using NMR and the establishment of β-NMR for the study of mobility in solid ionic conductors.Using an arsenal of complementary NMR methods, Professor Heitjans has systematically researched diffusion processes in detail over large time scales and achieved groundbreaking results, particularly on lithium ion conductors, long before their enormous importance as battery materials became apparent.He also did pioneering work in β-NMR, in particular using 8Li as an ideal nuclear spin probe for relaxation processes for the first time to comprehensively study ion mobility. Overall, he has pursued magnetic resonance over many decades with exceptional breadth and depth and an interdisciplinary approach in a highly topical field of research."

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Otto Stern Prize 2024

On 12 September 2024 in Rostock, the Magnetic Resonance Division of the German Chemical Society awarded the Otto Stern Prize 2024 to Prof. Dr. Dr. h.c. Horst Kessler:

"In honour of his fundamental contributions to the conformational analysis of proteins such as the spider silk protein and cyclic peptides using NMR spectroscopy, which made the successful design of diagnostics and therapeutics for medical applications possible.Horst Kessler made a fundamental contribution to the understanding of exchange processes using NMR and inspired an entire generation of NMR spectroscopists with his contributions to multidimensional NMR spectroscopy. He uniquely combined new NMR spectroscopic methods with the design of mostly cyclic peptides and medicinal chemistry research. Highlights are the RGD peptides designed on the basis of NMR-based conformational analysis and optimised for bioavailability, which modulate the function of integrins. The Otto Stern Prize commemorates the discovery of directional quantification in spin "up" and "down". Horst Kessler has used NMR spectroscopy with the aim of constantly obtaining and realising new ideas for better drugs and diagnostics."

Otto Stern Prize 2023

The Magnetic Resonance Division of the German Chemical Society awarded the Otto Stern Prize 2023 on 15 April 2023 in Brussels to Prof. Dr Jean Jeener (1931-2023):

"Professor Jeener invented two-dimensional NMR spectroscopy and first formulated the two-pulse experiment which was named COSY by Richard Ernst later on. Together with Richard Ernst, he developed the NOESY and EXSY experiments both theoretically and experimentally. After more than 50 years, polarisation transfer via J couplings, as well as transfer via relaxation phenomena and exchange are still cornerstones of NMR spectroscopy for chemical analysis and for life and materials sciences. Professor Jean Jeener's work shaped the NMR spectroscopy that we know today."

Video of the award ceremony (YouTube)

Otto Stern Prize 2022

The Magnetic Resonance Division of the German Chemical Society awarded the Otto Stern Prize 2022 to Prof. Dr Jörg Kärger on the occasion of the 43rd FGMR Annual Discussion Meeting in September 2022 in Karlsruhe:

"In recognition of his fundamental contributions to the application of pulsed field gradient NMR spectroscopy in the analysis of molecular transport processes in porous materials.Based on NMR investigations of transport processes, Prof. Dr Kärger has influenced NMR spectroscopy in a broad and interdisciplinary way: He has advanced the establishment of fundamental physical models of mass transport at the molecular level. This includes multidomain diffusion, the consideration of adsorption processes, and also the experimental demonstration of one-dimensional diffusion. His work on mass transport and sorption of complex nanoporous materials has far-reaching implications for materials science and engineering. The knowledge gained from his work on molecular processes is highly relevant for technical applications such as molecular separation processes and heterogeneous catalysis. His work thus demonstrates in an exemplary manner how magnetic resonance at the highest level, consistently methodically advanced, can serve to solve current challenges, e.g. in the areas of sustainability, climate and energy."

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Otto Stern Prize 2020

The first Otto Stern Prize of the Magnetic Resonance Division was awarded to Prof. Dr h.c. mult. Tony Keller (1937-2023) was awarded:

"In recognition of his fundamental and extraordinary contributions to the development of nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy - from noise decoupling and the introduction of pulse Fourier spectroscopy in commercial spectrometers to superconducting magnets and fully digitised spectrometers to cryo-heads and high-field spectrometers - which opened up a broad scientific application for NMR spectroscopy in Germany and the world and thus contributed to the establishment of NMR spectroscopy in chemistry as well as bio- and material sciences. The Otto Stern Prize 2020 commemorates the discovery of directional quantisation into the spin states "up" and "down". Tony Keller has led the development of NMR spectroscopy in the "up" direction."

Otto Stern Awards since 2020

YearPlace of awardNameReason for the award
2025BonnProf. Dr Paul Heitjans

Fundamental work on ion dynamics and diffusion in solids using NMR and establishment of β-NMR for the study of mobility in solid ionic conductors

2024Rostock

Prof. Dr Dr Dr h.c. Horst Kessler

Fundamental contributions to the conformational analysis of proteins such as the spider silk protein and cyclic peptides using NMR spectroscopy, which enabled the successful design of diagnostics and therapeutics for medical applications

2023Brussels, BEProf. Dr. Jean Jeener†

Invention of two-dimensional NMR spectroscopy and first formulation of the two-pulse experiment

2022Karlsruhe

Prof. Dr. Jörg Kärger

Fundamental contributions to the application of pulsed field gradient NMR spectroscopy in the analysis of molecular transport processes in porous materials

2020Spiez, CH

Prof. Dr h.c. mult. Tony Keller†

Contributions to the development of nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy

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