Karlovitz was born on 9 November 1904 in
Pápa, Hungary, into a
Catholic family. His father, Adolf Karlovitz, was a
pharmacist, and his mother, Ilona Hanauer, was the daughter of the local ironmonger. Béla was the youngest of the three siblings. He has finished the local Catholic secondary school in 1922, which was in the neighborhood of his father's pharmacy. He graduated in 1926 from the Faculty of Mechanical Engineering at the
Technical University of Budapest. There was no electric engineering education in Hungary at this time, therefore he subsequently continued his studies at the
ETH Zurich. Béla Karlovitz got married in
Switzerland to Maria von König. After returning home, he started working at the Budapest Electric Works. Béla Karlovitz and his coworker Dénes Halász developed a method that was based on the principle of
magnetohydrodynamic generation and which was expected to give 50% higher efficiency compared to the contemporary electricity generation methods using heat engines. Béla Karlovitz was unable to exploit his invention in Hungary due to the lack of funding. The Mayor of Budapest recognized the revolutionary potential of MHD generation and guaranteed Béla Karlovitz a fully-paid leave for one year to elaborate the concept. In 1938, Béla Karlovitz from Hungary approached the
German Siemens company with a request to develop an MHD generator using combustion gases. Siemens referred him to
Westinghouse in the USA. He arrived at the Westinghouse research facility in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania with colleague Dénes Halász in 1938, and the company provided them US$500,000 to realize their concept. His family intended to follow him in the subsequent year, but
World War II broke out, and they could unite only in 1946. Even though they planned to return to Hungary shortly, the political situation in Hungary and his career development both inclined them to stay in the US. His work there resulted in the world's first patent for the MHD power process on August 13, 1940 (U.S. Patent No. 2,210,918, "Process for the Conversion of Energy"). He worked at Westinghouse until 1947. Later, he mainly dealt with combustion science research at the Explosives and Physical Science Division, Bureau of Mines in Pittsburgh. From 1953, he was working with the Combustion and Explosive Research, Inc. His name appears on two, less-cited patents from his later career stage. With his colleague, Bernard Lewis, they have worked on the improvement of aluminum production for increased efficiency and process safety He also worked for Toyota to reduce the pollutant emission of their
spark-ignition engine. Béla Karlovitz pursued a scientific career even after his retirement, up to his death at 99 on the leap day of 2004. ==History of MHD generation and MHD propulsion==