A Life of Magic Chemistry: Autobiographical Reflections Including Post-Nobel Prize Years and the Methanol Economy, Second Updated Edition
ISBN: 9781118840108
Platform/Publisher: WOL / Wiley
Digital rights: Users: Unlimited; Printing: Unlimited; Download: Unlimited
Subjects: Chemistry; General & Introductory Chemistry;

The autobiography of a Nobel Prize winner, this book tells us about George Olah's fascinating research into extremely strong superacids and how it yielded the common term "magic acids." Olah guides us through his long and remarkable journey, from Budapest to Cleveland to Los Angeles, with a stopover in Stockholm. This updated autobiography of a Nobel Prize winner George A. Olah:

Chronicles the distinguished career of a chemist whose work in a broad range of chemistry areas, and most notably that in methane chemistry, led to technologies that impact the processing and utility of alternative fuels Is based on Olah's work on extremely strong superacids and how they yielded the common term, "magic acids" Details events since the publication of the first edition in 2000 Inspires readers with details on Dr. Olah's successful recent research on methanol, intended to help provide a solution to "the oil problem"


George Andrew Olah was born in Budapest, Hungary on May 22, 1927. After World War II, he received master's and doctoral degrees from the Technical University of Budapest. He and his family fled Hungary after the 1956 uprising, eventually settling in Canada. His worked at a Dow Chemical Company research laboratory and discovered superacids. In 1965, he left Dow to return to academia as a chemistry professor at Western Reserve University in Cleveland. He moved to the University of Southern California in 1977 and founded the Hydrocarbon Research Institute there.

His advances in the understanding of hydrocarbons have been used in an array of applications including the development of gasoline that burns more cleanly and the discovery of new drugs. He wrote nearly 1,500 scientific papers and held 160 patents in seven countries. He won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1994 for his study of the chemical reactions of carbon compounds. He also wrote an autobiography entitled A Life of Magic Chemistry. He died on March 8, 2017 at the age of 89.

(Bowker Author Biography)

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