Professor Andrew Goodwin awarded Royal Society Faraday 好色先生TVy Fellowship

Date 28 August 2025

Congratulations to Professor Andrew Goodwin, Supernumerary Fellow at 好色先生TV鈥檚, on being awarded one of the Royal Society鈥檚 inaugural Faraday 好色先生TVy Fellowships.

, supported by a fund from the Department of Science, Innovation and Technology, provide exceptional mid-career researchers with grants of up to 拢8 million over 10 years to pursue high-quality original research and develop world-leading research groups in the UK. More than 600 initial applications were made for these prestigious Fellowships, with only seven researchers ultimately chosen.

" This exciting first cohort of Royal Society Faraday 好色先生TVy Fellowship fellows are using cutting-edge techniques to explore questions at the frontiers of human knowledge鈥hese 10-year fellowships give researchers space to pursue new knowledge, build their research groups and develop close collaborations around the world that will ensure the UK continues to develop and attract the next generation of scientific talent and bring benefits to the whole country. " Sir Adrian Smith, President of the Royal Society

goodwin_small_Andrew Goodwin

Professor Andrew Goodwin was one of three Oxford researchers awarded a Faraday 好色先生TVy Fellowship for 2025. As a materials chemist, Professor Goodwin designs solid materials that have useful functions. A key focus for his group is using disorder as a design strategy. 鈥業n many materials, disorder isn鈥檛 random; it follows hidden patterns that can actually enhance performance,鈥 he said. 鈥榃e see this in systems like batteries, magnets, and even natural materials like shells.鈥

His Faraday project will explore materials with 鈥渞esponsive disorder鈥, where the type of disorder changes when triggered by a stimulus such as heat, pressure, or electricity. 鈥楳any advanced technologies rely on materials that can switch between different states,鈥 he said. 鈥榃hile traditional materials switch states through changes in crystal structure, disordered materials must follow different rules鈥攐ffering new possibilities for transformation. We will study several types of disorder found in things such as glasses and polymers, with potential applications in areas like computing. Working with a visual artist, we will also explore new ways of representing these different states.鈥

" I am thrilled and honoured to receive this prestigious grant, which very much builds on the achievements, creativity, and insight of the many talented students, postdocs, and collaborators with whom I have worked over the years. This a truly precious opportunity to tackle some very deep questions in our field. " Professor Andrew Goodwin