Whitesides is the author of more than 1200 scientific articles and is listed as an inventor on at least 134 patents. He ranked 5th on
Thomson ISI's list of the 1000 most cited chemists from 1981 to 1997, and 38th on the list from 2000 to 2010. According to the
Hirsch index, a ranking which combines number of articles published and citations of those articles by others, he was the most influential living chemist in 2011. Whitesides has mentored more than 300 graduate students, postdocs, and visiting scholars. He serves on the editorial advisory boards of several scientific journals, including
ACS Nano,
Angewandte Chemie,
Chemistry & Biology, and
Small. In 2002 he became foreign member of the
Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences. He also became a foreign member of the
Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters. Among other awards, Whitesides is the recipient of the
American Chemical Society's
ACS Award in Pure Chemistry (1975), the
Arthur C. Cope Award (1995),
National Medal of Science (1998), the
Kyoto Prize in Materials Science and Engineering (2003), the Gabbay Award (2004), the
Dan David Prize (2005), the Welch Award in Chemistry (2005), the
AIC Gold Medal (2007), and the
Priestley Medal (2007), the highest honor conferred by the ACS. More recently, George Whitesides received the 2009
Dreyfus Prize in the Chemical Sciences from
The Camille and Henry Dreyfus Foundation on September 30, 2009, for his creation of new materials that have significantly advanced the field of chemistry and its societal benefits. In November 2009, he was recipient of the
Reed M. Izatt and James J. Christensen Lectureship. Also in 2009, George Whitesides was awarded the
2009 Benjamin Franklin Medal in Chemistry by The
Franklin Institute in Philadelphia, for his pioneering chemical research in molecular self-assembly and innovative nanofabrication techniques that have resulted in rapid, inexpensive fabrication of ultra small devices. He was awarded the
F. A. Cotton Medal for Excellence in Chemical Research of the
American Chemical Society in 2011. In 2011 he also received the
King Faisal International Prize in Chemistry. In 2013 he was awarded the
IRI Medal alongside
Robert S. Langer. In 2013 he gave the inaugural
Patrusky Lecture. In 2017, he was awarded the Lifetime Achievement award by Xconomy. In 2022 he received the
Kavli Prize in Nanosciences. In 2015, he received an honorary doctorate from the
University of Bath. ==Personal life==