Egon Gustaf Martin Wiberg (born 3 June 1901 inGüstrow; died 24 November 1976 inMunich) was a German chemist and professor of inorganic chemistry at theLudwig Maximilian University of Munich.[1]
Wiberg studied chemistry at theTechnical University of Karlsruhe (TH Karlsruhe) since 1921 and completed his doctorate in 1927.[2] He was an academic student ofStefan Goldschmidt and wrote his doctoral thesis on "Über den Abbau von Aminosäuren und Dipeptiden durch Hypobromit" ("On the degradation of amino acids and dipeptides by hypobromite"). In 1931 he completed his habilitation at the TH Karlsruhe.[2] In 1936 he became an unscheduled professor at the TH Karlsruhe and in 1938 provisional head of the Extraordinariat (apl. Prof.) for Inorganic Chemistry at theLudwig Maximilian University of Munich.[2] Since 1943 he was co-editor of the "Lehrbuch der Chemie", founded by Arnold F. Holleman, which was published in 1955 as "Lehrbuch der Inorganischen Chemie".[3] In 1951 he became a full professor and director of the Institute of Inorganic Chemistry at the Ludwig Maximilian University in Munich.[2]
The fields of work were hydrides of the chemical elements beryllium, magnesium, boron, aluminium and other metals as well as phosphorus, boron, silicon and boron nitrogen compounds.[2]
A lecture series is named after him.[6]