George A. Olah (born May 22, 1927, Budapest, Hungary—died March 8, 2017, Beverly Hills, California, U.S.) was a Hungarian American chemist who won the 1994 Nobel Prize for Chemistry for work conducted in the early 1960s that isolated the positively charged, electron-deficient fragments of hydrocarbons known as carbocations (or carbonium ions).
In 1949 Olah received a doctorate from the Technical University of Budapest, where he taught until 1954. He worked at the Hungarian Academy of Sciences for two years before emigrating from Hungary during the revolution of 1956. He became a research scientist at the Dow Chemical Company in Canada (1957–64) and in Framingham, Massachusetts, U.S. (1964–65). He was a professor at Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio (1965–1977), before joining the faculty of the University of Southern California at Los Angeles, where he became director of the Loker Hydrocarbon Research Institute in 1980.
Although theoretically recognized for several decades as a common intermediate in many organic reactions, carbocations were unobservable because they are a short-lived, unstable class of compound. Olah was able to successfully disassemble, examine, and then recombine carbocations through the use of superacids and ultracold solvents. His breakthrough, announced in 1962, initiated a new branch of organic chemistry and led to the development of innovative carbon-based fuels and higher-octane gasoline.