Professor Richmond Sarpong

Richmond Sarpong is a Professor of Chemistry at the University of California Berkeley where he and his group specializes in synthetic organic chemistry. Richmond became interested in chemistry after seeing, firsthand, the effectiveness of the drug ivermectin in combating river blindness during his childhood in Ghana, West Africa. Richmond described his influences and inspirations in a TEDxBerkeley talk in 2015 (Face of Disease in Sub-Saharan Africa). Richmond completed his undergraduate studies at Macalester College in St. Paul, MN with Prof. Rebecca C. Hoye and his graduate work was carried out with Prof. Martin Semmelhack at Princeton. He conducted postdoctoral studies at Caltech with Prof. Brian Stoltz.

At Berkeley, Richmond’s laboratory focuses on the synthesis of bioactive complex organic molecules, with a particular focus on secondary metabolites that come from marine or terrestrial flora and fauna. These natural products continue to serve as the inspiration for new medicines. It is Richmond’s hope that through the work in his laboratory, he and his coworkers will uncover methods and strategies for synthesis that may contribute to more efficient ways to prepare bioactive compounds that may inspire new medicines.

Of all his professional accomplishments, Richmond is most proud of the students in his research group and those with whom he has worked in the past that have gone on to their own independent careers. He enjoys teaching and was the recipient of the 2009 UC Berkeley Department of Chemistry teaching award and the 2016 Noyce Prize for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching in the Physical Sciences at Berkeley. Richmond’s research group has published over 135 papers and he has received numerous awards in recognition of his research including an Alfred P. Sloan Foundation Fellowship, Camille Dreyfus Teacher-Scholar Award, ACS Cope Scholar Award, the 2015 Royal Society of Chemistry Synthetic Organic Chemistry Award, a 2017 Guggenheim Fellowship, the 2019 ISHC Katritzky Award, the 2019 Society of Synthetic Organic Chemistry Japan Mukaiyama Award, the 2021 ACS-DOC Edward Leete Award, the 2022 ACS Award for Creative Work in Synthetic Organic Chemistry and a 2022 Alexander von Humboldt Research Award.