Omar Farha Explained

Omar K. Farha is the Charles E. and Emma H. Morrison Professor in Chemistry at Northwestern University, an Executive Editor for ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces, and President of Numat.

His current research spans diverse areas of chemistry and materials science ranging from energy to defense-related challenges. Specifically, his research focuses on the rational design of metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) for applications sensing, catalysis, storage, separations, and water purification. In 2012, Farha et al. synthesized two MOFs (NU-109 and NU-110) that broke the record for the highest specific surface area.[1] His NU-1501 is the record holder in surface area when all 4 consistency criteria are met. His research accomplishments have been recognized by several awards and honors including a fellow of the European Academy of Sciences, a Fellow of the Academy of Arab Scientists, the Kuwait Prize, the Japanese Society of Coordination Chemistry “International award for creative work”, the Royal Society of Chemistry “Environment, Sustainability and Energy Division Early Career” Award, the American Chemical Society “The Satinder Ahuja Award for Young Investigators in Separation Science” and “ACS ENFL Emerging Researcher Award”, and an award established by the Department of Chemistry at Northwestern University in his honor: the Omar Farha Award for Research Leadership “awarded for stewardship, cooperation and leadership in the finest pursuit of research in chemistry” and given annually to an outstanding research scientist working in the department. Prof. Farha has been named a “Highly Cited Researcher” from 2014 to 2023. Prof. Farha is one of the Top 100 Chemists (#35) in the world (Research.com). Prof. Farha is the co-founder and president of Numat, the first company to commercialized an engineered system-level product enabled by Metal-Organic Framework Materials.

Education

Farha earned his A.A. at Fullerton College in 1999, his B.S. in chemistry at University of California, Los Angeles in 2002, and his Ph.D. in 2006 under the advisement of M. Frederick Hawthorne.[2] He subsequently trained as a post-doc with Joseph T. Hupp at Northwestern.[3]

Publications

Notes and References

  1. Metal–Organic Framework Materials with Ultrahigh Surface Areas: Is the Sky the Limit? . 10.1021/ja3055639 . 2012 . Farha . Omar K. . Eryazici . Ibrahim . Jeong . Nak Cheon . Hauser . Brad G. . Wilmer . Christopher E. . Sarjeant . Amy A. . Snurr . Randall Q. . Nguyen . Sonbinh T. . Yazaydın . A. Özgür . Hupp . Joseph T. . Journal of the American Chemical Society . 134 . 36 . 15016–15021 . 22906112 .
  2. Web site: Omar Farha. Northwestern University. April 21, 2019.
  3. Web site: Chemistry Tree - Omar K. Farha.