2026

STEM for Britain

Exhibition of posters by early-career research scientists, engineers and mathematicians

Held in the Houses of Parliament · Tuesday 17th March 2026

Organised by the Parliamentary & Scientific Committee

About the Event

STEM for BRITAIN is a major scientific poster competition and exhibition which has been held in Parliament since 1997. It gives members of both Houses of Parliament an insight into the outstanding research work being undertaken in UK universities by early-career researchers.

Applications were invited from early-career research scientists, engineers, technologists and mathematicians for the opportunity to exhibit posters across five disciplines. Prizes are awarded for the posters which best communicated high-level science, engineering or mathematics to a lay audience.

Five Disciplines

Researchers presented posters across:

Biological & Biomedical Sciences Chemistry Engineering Mathematical Sciences Physics

The Westminster Medal

The Westminster Medal for the overall winner is awarded in memory of the late Dr Eric Wharton, who did so much to establish SET for Britain as a regular event in the Parliamentary calendar. Presented by the Society of Chemical Industry, it recognises the early-career scientist presenting the best poster at the event.

2026 Prize Winners

Congratulations to all prize winners from this year's competition.

Biological & Biomedical Sciences

Gold
Zoe Marshall
University of the Highlands and Islands / The James Hutton Institute
Using the ancient Scottish Bere barley landrace to genetically map manganese-use efficiency and improve nutrient use in British crops
Silver
Aniketh Bishnu
University of Dundee
Pharmacological activation of AMPK as a therapeutic strategy for metabolic disease
Bronze
Katie Dunmore
University of Exeter
Mapping Atlantic Bluefin Tuna and Iberian Orca interactions in shared waters
Nutrition Society Prize
Puja Mehta
UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology
Design of a state-of-the-art Motor Neuron Disease platform for therapeutic discovery
Physiological Society Prize
Victoria Norton
University of Reading
Closing the fibre gap – developing a novel fibre intervention for improved gut health

Chemistry

Gold
Andrea Rogolino
University of Cambridge
Photocatalyst/plastic composite floating at the liquid-liquid interface for chemical synthesis under sunlight
Silver
Jody Cheong
National Physical Laboratory
The Path to Cleaner Air: A pioneering inter-laboratory study on brake wear emissions from road vehicles
Bronze
Jamie Gravell
Imperial College London
Tracking Fluidity Changes During Neurodegenerative Disease: Protein Phase Separation or Aggregation?

Engineering

Gold
Joni Wildman
University of Bath (UWE)
Using Fungi to Transform Waste into Sustainable Materials for Construction
Silver
Tian Yuan
Imperial College London
Decoding Brain Fluid Transport for Precision Drug Delivery in Neurological Disease
Bronze
Goronwy Tawy
Bangor University / University of Southampton
A new display technology using nonlinear wave mixing for next-generation screens

Mathematical Sciences

Gold
Torin Fastnedge
University of Oxford
Mathematical modelling of microfibre release by washing machines and environmental impact
Silver
Zita Fulop
University of Glasgow
Personalised Brain Cancer Treatment: Improving Drug Delivery with Electric Field Modelling
Bronze
Freya Bull
University College London
Predicting the incidence of catheter-associated bacteriuria in hospital settings

Physics

Gold
Ané Kritzinger
University of St Andrews
Towards safer spirits: non-invasive detection of methanol in sealed bottles using Raman spectroscopy
Silver
Fraser Birks
University of Warwick
Machine-Learned Interatomic Potentials Applied to Helium–Tungsten Implantation in Fusion Systems
Bronze
Isabelle Rogers
University of Leeds
Cancer cell-selective delivery of RNA therapies using fusogenic silica nanoparticles

All Exhibitors

120 early-career researchers presented posters at STEM for Britain 2026.

NameInstitutionDisciplinePoster Title

Our Sponsors & Supporters

STEM for Britain 2026 is made possible by the generous support of the following organisations.