John Hartwig

John F. Hartwig

University of California, Berkeley

Henry Rapoport Professor of Chemistry

John Hartwig was born outside of Chicago, spent his childhood in upstate New York, and received his A.B. from Princeton University. He received his Ph.D. from U.C. Berkeley with Bob Bergman and Richard Andersen and conducted a postdoctoral fellowship at MIT with Stephen Lippard. In 1992 he began his independent career at Yale University and became the Irenée P. DuPont Professor in 2004. In 2006, he moved to the University of Illinois, where he was the Kenneth L. Rinehart Jr. Professor of Chemistry, and in 2011, he returned to U.C. Berkley as the Henry Rapoport Professor.

Professor Hartwig's research focuses on the discovery and understanding of new reactions for organic synthesis catalyzed by transition metal complexes. He is well known for contributions to widely practiced cross-coupling chemistry that form arylamines, aryl ethers, aryl sulfides, and a-aryl carbonyl compounds and for the discovery of practical C-H bond functionalization reactions, in addition to his work on the direct conversion of carbonyl compounds to alpha-aryl carbonyl derivatives, catalysts for the addition of amines alkenes, and highly selective catalysts for the regio and enantioselective amination of allylic carbonates. He has focused on the mechanism and fundamental organometallic chemistry that underpins them, including studies on reductive eliminations to form carbon-heteroatom bonds, oxidative addition of N-H bonds, and olefin insertions into amides and alkoxides. Since moving to Berkeley, he has also been studying catalysis with artificial metalloenzymes and artificial biosynthetic pathways, as well as conversions of biomass to chemicals and upcycling of polyolefins. He is the author of the textbook “Organotransition Metal Chemistry: From Bonding to Catalysis.” Outside the lab, he enjoys cooking, music, and activities outdoors.

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