Ttranslation from the German text
Born in Berlin in 1897. Doctorate and
University Teaching Thesis in Marburg/Lahn from the Faculty of
Chemistry. Head of Department at Braunschweig (Technical College)
from 1932; Associate Professor at Freiburg/Brsg. from 1937;
Professor and Faculty Director at the Institute of Chemistry,
Tübingen, from 1944; turned down the same position as
successor to H. Staudinger at Freiburg/Brsg.; accepted the same
position at Heidelberg as successor to K. Freudenberg. Professor
Emeritus since 1967.
Scientific Activities
Textbook on
stereochemistry, 1930. Papers on the subject of ring tension and
double bonds as well as valency tautomerism. Main research into
organic reactions of alkali metals and elaboration of
carbon-based chemistry. Discovery of the halogen-metal exchange
reaction (simultaneously with H. Gilman). Development of ylide
chemistry and, together with that, study of the Stevens and
Sommelet rearrangements as well as intra-anionic ether
isomerisation. Through the synthesis of the pentaaryl derivatives
of the elements of group 5, the phosphorous ylides were
discovered and also, in 1953, the carbonylolefins which have
since proven to be crucial for the manufacture of synthetic
fabrics and also important in other industrial processes. In 1942
dehydrobenzol was proven to be a shortlived by-product, a fact
demonstrated bye. D. Roberts in 1953 and by me, only this time
using different means, viz. control experiments on Diels - Alder adducts. More recently the
concept of the "at"-complexes as a counterpart to the "onium"
complexes has led to the development of a new chemistry from
which have come the sodium tetra phenylborates.
Honours
Honorary Doctorate from the Sorbonne
in 1957; Honorary Doctorate from the Universities of Tübingen
and Hamburg in 1962; Adolf von Baeyer Memorial Medal
from the German Chemical Society in 1953; Silver Medal from the
University of
Helsinki in 1957; Dannie Heinemann Award from the
Göttingen Academy of Sciences in 1965; Otto Hahn Award for
Chemistry and Physics in 1967; Silver Medal from the City of
Paris in 1969; Paul Karrer Medal from the University of Zurich
in 1972; Médaille de la Chaire Bruylants (University of Louvain) in 1972; Roger Adams Award
from the American Chemical Society in 1973; Karl Ziegler Prize in
1975; Honorary Member of the Swiss Chemical Society in 1963;
Honorary Member of the New York Academy of Sciences in 1965; Member of the
Chemical Society of Peru, also in 1965; Honorary Fellow of the
Chemical Society (London) in 1967; Member of the French Academy
in 1971; Member of the Society of Medical Sciences, Córdoba
(Argentina), in 1976. As well as these, member of several German
academies: Bavarian Academy of Sciences, Heidelberg Academy of
Sciences, German Academy of the Natural Scientist
Leopoldina Halle.
From Nobel Lectures, Chemistry 1971-1980, Editor-in-Charge Tore Frängsmyr, Editor Sture Forsén, World Scientific Publishing Co., Singapore, 1993
This CV was first published in the book series Les Prix Nobel. It was later edited and republished in Nobel Lectures. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.
Georg Wittig died on August 26, 1987.
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1979