The recipients of The Princess Royal Silver Medals for 2023 are:
• Dr Saritha Arunkumar, IBM Public Cloud WorldWide Technical Leader for Security
• Joel Gibbard MBE, CEO of Open Bionics and Samantha Payne MBE, COO of Open Bionics
• James Roberts, Co-founder and CEO of mOm Incubators
They will receive the awards at the Academy Awards Dinner in London on Thursday 13 July from HRH The Princess Royal, who is a Royal Fellow of the Academy.
The Princess Royal Silver Medal celebrates an outstanding personal contribution made to UK engineering by an early to mid-career engineer resulting in market exploitation. This year’s winners are revolutionising prostheses, blockchain and paediatric care in warzones.
Professor Bashir M Al-Hashimi CBE FREng, Chair of the Royal Academy of Engineering Awards Committee, said: “The recipients of The Princess Royal Silver Medal for 2023 are not only making measurable contributions to engineering in the UK but are exporting the benefits of their innovations around the world to advance progress in numerous sectors and help those in need. The inspiring individuals recognised are united by a commitment to improving society and facilitating economic growth through enterprise, technology, and collaboration.”
Dr Saritha Arunkumar, IBM Public Cloud WorldWide Technical Leader for Security
Dr Saritha Arunkumar is an IBM security leader with more than 20 years of experience in the IT security space. An authority on blockchain, cybersecurity and biometrics, she has made vital contributions to the security of systems used in defence and finance.
Dr Arunkumar was an integral part of the $80 million UK/US International Technology Alliance (ITA) research programme, which was led by IBM and included the Ministry of Defence, US Army Research Laboratory and university and industrial researchers. Over 12 years the programme conducted fundamental research affecting military coalition operations and resulted in multiple patents. Dr Arunkumar led some of the key security projects of the programme, building on international cybersecurity open standards and introducing a framework capable of calculating the trust value of continuously streamed information in security environments, which was highly commended by the military.
Her expertise also contributed to the success of Open Trade Platform project, which is a platform connecting buyers, sellers and their banks in a secure network to help simplify international trading. Dr Arunkumar was the lead security architect of the project and responsible for all the security components, which included a robust first-of-a-kind blockchain solution, various other security capabilities and cloud identity architecture integration.
As well as contributing to internationally important projects, Dr Arunkumar is passionate about volunteering. She runs popular patent incubator master classes and helps school and university students appreciate the importance of ideation and patenting. A member of IBM’s Academy of Technology, she has led voluntary, cross-divisional projects, including promoting STEM in primary and secondary education.
Joel Gibbard MBE, CEO of Open Bionics and Samantha Payne MBE, COO of Open Bionics
Joel Gibbard MBE and Samantha Payne MBE are the co-founders of Open Bionics, which makes the first multi-grip myoelectric arm available for children.
The company uses 3D printing to reduce costs and increase the reach and accessibility of its bionic arms. The use of this additive manufacturing process also means its prostheses are lighter and more comfortable for children to wear, while 3D scanning is used to design bespoke details and ensure the best possible fit.
An innovative co-design process places users at the centre of the R&D and prototype iteration process to hone the functionality of the Hero Arm, while fun designs help children positively embrace what makes them unique. The company struck a royalty-free licensing deal with The Walt Disney Company enabling children to choose Disney, Star Wars and Marvel designs to resemble Iron Man, for example. Open Bionics is exceptional in its empowering approach to transforming children with limb differences into bionic superheroes.
More than 500 Hero Arms have been shipped across the USA, UK, Europe, Australia and New Zealand, enabling users to get excited about moving their new fingers and hugging their parents.
James Roberts, Co-founder and CEO of mOm Incubators
James Roberts is the inventor of a new neonatal incubator, designed, developed and manufactured in Britain that has helped premature babies thrive in NHS hospitals and in war-torn Ukraine.
The mOm Essential Incubator is a compact, cost-effective machine that has been designed to work in multiple environments. Its clever design solves problems associated with conventional systems and when packed up, it is less than a quarter of the size of a regular incubator, making it very portable. These features enable it to provide flexibility to the neonatal care system. It is being used in a series of pilots in four NHS hospitals to ease the need for short-term admission to special care and to help maintain the core temperature of babies being moved around the hospital.
The mOm Essential Incubator can also be used in emerging economies and war zones. A total of 75 incubators have been sent to Ukraine, where they are being used to keep babies warm in hospitals and bomb shelters transformed into make-shift neonatal wards. For every 1°C a child loses when they are premature, their chance of mortality increases by 28%, making these incubators particularly invaluable in draughty and underground shelters.
The company estimates that between 1,500 and 2,000 babies have been positively impacted by its incubators and Ukraine’s Ministry of Health has asked for another 100.
Notes for editors
- The Princess Royal Silver Medal was established as the Royal Academy of Engineering Silver Medal in 1994 to recognise an outstanding and demonstrated personal contribution to British engineering, which has resulted in successful market exploitation, by an engineer with less than 22 years in full time employment or equivalent on 1 January in the year of award and who will normally be Chartered. In 2021, the Academy’s Royal Fellow, HRH The Princess Royal, generously allowed the Academy to rename its Silver Medal, to honour Her Royal Highness’s outstanding contributions as a Royal Fellow and as an exceptional champion for engineering, including as a vocal and longstanding supporter of women in engineering and science.
- Annual Awards Dinner 2023. This year’s Royal Academy of Engineering Awards Dinner takes place in London on Thursday 13 July. Along with the announcement of the winner of this year’s MacRobert Award, the event will also celebrate the winners of other awards and prizes including the President’s Medal, the Rooke Award, the Major Project Award for Sustainability and the RAEng Engineers Trust Young Engineer of the Year.
- The Royal Academy of Engineering is harnessing the power of engineering to build a sustainable society and an inclusive economy that works for everyone. In collaboration with our Fellows and partners, we’re growing talent and developing skills for the future, driving innovation and building global partnerships, and influencing policy and engaging the public. Together we’re working to tackle the greatest challenges of our age.