Author Somorjai, Gabor A., interviewee.

Title Oral history interview with ̀Gabor Somorjai, 2014 January 30 and 31 / conducted by Hilary Domush.

Location Call Number Status
 Oral Histories  QD22.S6667 A5 2014  AVAILABLE
Description sound files : digital, mp3 file.
transcript : (95 leaves) ; 29 cm
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spoken word spw
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Series Chemical Heritage Foundation Oral history transcript ; 0910.
Note Interview conducted by Hilary Domush at University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, California, on 30 and 31 January 2014. (With Subsequent Corrections and Additions)
Summary ̀Gbor Somorjai was born in Budapest, Hungary, during World War II and lived an comfortable, integrated life until Anti-Semitic laws impacted the family. His paternal grandfather had converted to Judaism. His mother's family was in the shoe business. Anti-Semitic laws cost Somorjai's father, a math genius, his bank job, whence he was conscripted and sent to the Russian front. The elder Somorjai was interned eventually in Mauthausen concentration camp and returned with typhoid. Like many Hungarians, the Somorjais were rescued by Raoul Wallenberg and eventually returned to their home, but the Russian occupation forbade school, so ̀Gbor played chess and read history until he eventually matriculated in Minta Gimǹzium. From there his basketball coach got him into Budapest University of Technology and Economics, where he studied chemical engineering, interested in polymers and catalysis. When the Russian tanks rolled into Budapest, Somorjai and his girlfriend, later his wife, escaped to Austria. In Vienna he met Cornelius Tobias and learned about Charles Tobias at the University of California, Berkeley. The two immigrated to the United States, eventually accepted, provisionally, by Berkeley. At Berkeley Somorjai switched to chemistry, working with Richard Powell on his long-lived dream of catalysis. During this time he also married. PhD in hand and dream in heart, Somorjai accepted a job at International Business Machines (IBM). He built an instrument for his research into low-energy electron diffraction (LEED), and observed that catalytic reactions take place on surfaces. His interest in surfaces extended from electrical to chemical reactions, and he began to study platinum and then oxide-metallic interfaces. This led to the study of nanotechnology and the development of the scanning tunneling microscope. Interesting even to laymen are his explanation of why ice is slippery and his discussion of contact lenses, which he points out are polymers; both have their effectiveness on the surface. He is called the father of surface science. Moving at last to catalysis, he began consulting on catalytic converters for General Motors Company. Though he says that instruments magically appear when needed, in fact he has developed most of his own. There are three types of catalysis: heterogeneous, homogeneous, and enzyme. Somorjai is working on heterogenizing homogeneous catalysis to yield hybrid catalysis, and attempting to figure out how to do enzyme catalysis in a hybrid model with heterogeneous catalysis, and then working out how multiple catalysts work. He maintains that the "discovery of [his] life" is that catalytic reactions are controlled by the size and shape of nanoparticles; when two-dimensional they form a Langmuir-Blodgett film, and when three-dimensional they are useful to industry. Somorjai explains how he brought his parents to the United States while he was at IBM. He talks about Amos Elon's The Pity of It All. He wants to do science as long as he can, he says, stressing the importance and explosive increase of science in United States and the change of science research from industry to academia. Somorjai says that finding and placing students is important; he always looked for those with the dream and attempts to place them in the best possible situations. Somorjai has published many articles and books and won many, many awards. He and his wife have established at Berkeley the Somorjai Award and the Somorjai Professorship.
Cite As ̀Gabor Somorjai interview conducted by Hilary Domush at University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, California, on 30 and 31 January 2014. (Philadelphia: Chemical Heritage Foundation, Oral History Transcript 0910).
Note Sound files Science History Institute.
Transcript Science History Institute.
Access Restrictions No restrictions on access. Reproduction and use with permission.
Biography Born in Budapest, Hungary, on 4 May 1935. Education: BS, Chemical Engineering, Technical University, Budapest, Hungary (1956); PhD, Chemistry, University of California, Berkeley (1960). Professional Experience: International Business Machines, Research Staff (1960-1964); Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Faculty Senior Scientist (1964-present); University of California, Berkeley, Assistant Professor of Chemistry (1964-1967), Associate Professor of Chemistry (1967-1972), Professor of Chemistry (1972-present).
Indexes Transcript has been indexed.
Note Part or all of this item has been digitized by Science History Institute.
Subject(s) Somorjai, Gabor A., interviewee.
Wallenberg, Raoul, 1912-1947.
Tobias, Charles W., 1920-1996.
Powell, Richard E. (Richard Edward)
University of California, Berkeley -- Faculty.
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.
International Business Machines Corporation.
Chemical engineers -- Hungary -- Biography.
Chemical engineers -- Hungary -- Interviews.
Jewish scientists -- Hungary -- Biography.
Jewish scientists -- Hungary -- Interviews.
Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Hungary.
Polymers -- Research.
Catalysts -- Research.
Nanotechnology.
Nanotechnology -- Research.
Electrons -- Diffraction.
Low energy electron diffraction.
Scanning tunneling microscopy.
Automobiles -- Catalytic converters -- Research.
Heterogeneous catalysis.
Homogeneous catalysis.
Genre Oral histories. lcgft
Alternate Author Domush, Hilary, interviewer.
Chemical Heritage Foundation.
Alternate Title ̀Gabor Somorjai oral history interview
Somorjai oral history interview