The David and Lucile Packard Foundation earlier this month named University of Virginia chemistry professor Robert J. Gilliard one of 20 Packard Fellows for Science and Engineering.
Gilliard, currently a Dr. Martin Luther King visiting professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, manipulates chemistry to create compounds from fundamental reactions, then seeks practical applications for them.
The Packard Fellowships in Science and Engineering are among the nation’s largest nongovernmental fellowships, designed to allow maximum flexibility in how the funding is used. Since 1988, this program has supported creative thinking of scientists and engineers whose research over time has led to new discoveries that improve people’s lives and enhance humanity’s understanding of the universe.
“To me the Packard Fellowship means freedom – the freedom to explore new and exciting ‘outside-the-box’ ideas,” Gilliard said. “This is also a serious recognition of the work that has been produced by the students and postdocs in my research laboratory.
“The projects we take on are typically very challenging from a synthetic chemistry perspective. We have worked very hard over the last four years and I am glad to see that those efforts are paying off. And what is really exciting is that the best is still yet to come. We are finalizing data for publications on multiple topics.”