Cambridge Encyclopedia :: Cambridge Encyclopedia Vol. 29

George A(ndrew) Olah

Chemist and educator, born in Budapest, Hungary. After taking his PhD at the Technical University of Budapest (1949), he served on its faculty (1949–54), then became the associate director of the Central Chemistry Research Institute of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences (1954–6). He emigrated to Canada where he became a research scientist with Dow Chemical of Canada Ltd (1957–64) before immigrating to the USA (1964) to work with Dow Chemical Co (1964–5). He then became a professor of chemistry at Case Western Reserve University (1965–9), becoming that institution's C F Mabery Professor of Research (1969–77). In 1977 he joined the Hydrocarbon Research Institute at the University of Southern California as the Donald P and Katherine B Loker Distinguished Professor of Chemistry. His major work in chemistry opened a new field of hydrocarbon research. In particular, he focused on efforts to stabilize, study, and recombine positively charged fragments of hydrocarbon molecules called ‘carbocations’; these had long been known to be involved in certain chemical reactions,but were too short-lived for chemists to investigate until Olah developed the techniques to stabilize them. His discoveries were important for the development of new fuels and led to the technology that gives gasoline a higher octane rating, and they are also applied in making plastics and pharmaceuticals. This work earned him the 1994 Nobel Prize for Chemistry.

George Andrew Olah (born May 22, 1927 as György Oláh) is a Hungarian-born American chemist.

Olah studied, then taught, at what is now Budapest University of Technology and Economics. Olah's pioneering work on carbocations started during his eight years with Dow. In 1965 he returned to academia at Case Western Reserve University and then to University of Southern California in 1977. In 1971, Olah became a naturalized citizen of the United States.

Olah is currently a distinguished professor at the University of Southern California and the director of the Loker Hydrocarbon Research Institute. In 2005, Olah wrote an essay promoting the methanol economy.

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