Rachel O'Reilly


Rachel O'Reilly 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.

Education

O'Reilly was born in Holywood and educated in a grammar school. She has dyslexia. She studied Natural Sciences at the University of Cambridge, working with Brian F. G. Johnson on her Master's project, and graduated in 1999. She moved to Imperial College London to work with Vernon C. Gibson on catalyst design, earning a PhD in 2003.

Career

O'Reilly joined Craig Hawker and Karen L. Wooley at Washington University in St. Louis. Here she demonstrated the fabrication of cross-linked polymer nanoparticles that were Click-ready. O'Reilly was awarded a 2004 Royal Commission for the Exhibition of 1851 fellowship, and took up a position at the University of Cambridge in 2005. At the University of Cambridge she was awarded a Royal Society Dorothy Hodgkin fellowship. She developed hollow polymeric nanocages that could selectively recognise substrates.
She joined the University of Warwick in 2009 as an Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council career-acceleration fellow. 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. She was appointed Professor in 2012 at the age of 34. That year she was the first ever UK winner of the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry Samsung Young Polymer Scientist prize. 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". In 2013 she was awarded the American Chemical Society Hermann Mark Young Scholar award. She was appointed Professor of Chemistry at the University of Birmingham in 2017.
Alongside her research, O'Reilly is a keen geologist and enjoys travelling to volcanoes. 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.

Honours and awards

2020 – Corday–Morgan Prize
2018 – Journal of Polymer Science Innovation Award
2016 – Royal Society of Chemistry Gibson-Fawcett award
2014 – Royal Society of Chemistry and Society of Chemical Industry, McBain Medal
2013 – American Chemical Society Hermann Mark Young Scholar award
2012 – International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry Samsung Young Polymer Scientist prize
2012 – Royal Society of Chemistry Hickinbottom Award
2008 – Royal Society of Chemistry Macro group UK Young Researcher medal
2007 – Royal Society of Chemistry Meldola Medal and Prize