Andrew Streitwieser

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Andrew Streitwieser
Born 1927
Buffalo, New York
Nationality US
Institutions University of California, Berkeley
Alma mater Columbia College, B.S.
Columbia University, Ph.D.
MIT, Post Doc.
Doctoral advisor William von Eggers Doering
Other academic advisors John D. Roberts
Influenced Roy A. Periana

Andrew Streitwieser (born 1927) is an American chemist known for his contributions to physical organic chemistry.

Streitwieser was born in 1927 in Buffalo, New York and he grew up in New York City. He attended Columbia College and then Columbia University where he earned a PhD in the research group of William von Eggers Doering in 1952.[1] He then was a postdoctoral fellow in the laboratory of John D. Roberts at MIT. He has been Professor of Chemistry at the University of California, Berkeley since 1953.

Streitwieser was one of the pioneers of molecular orbital theory and his book Molecular Orbital Theory for Organic Chemists had a lasting impact on the field.[2] His Chemical Reviews article titled "Solvolytic Displacement Reactions at Saturated Carbon"[3] was influential in the field of physical organic chemistry. Streitwieser is also the author of the university textbooks Introduction to Organic Chemistry (ISBN 0139738509) and Progress in Physical Organic Chemistry (ISBN 0471833568) as well as the autobiography A Lifetime of Synergy With Theory and Experiment (ISBN 0841218366)

Streitwieser was elected to the United States National Academy of Sciences in 1969 and is an American Chemical Society Fellow. His is the recipient of the ACS Award in Petroleum Chemistry (1967), James Flack Norris Award in Physical Organic Chemistry (1982), the Guggenheim Fellowship (1968), the Arthur C. Cope Scholar Award (1989), and the Roger Adams Award (2009).[4]

References

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