Amolak Chand Jain, born on 27 December 1928 to Jugal Kishore Jain and Kala Wati in the Indian capital of Delhi, graduated in chemistry (BSc hons) in 1948 from the University of Delhi and passed his master's degree from the same university in 1950.[1] After a brief stint as a research assistant at his alma mater, he started his career as a lecturer in 1952 at the department of chemistry and did his doctoral studies under the guidance of T. R. Seshadri, a renowned chemist and Padma Bhushan recipient, to secure his PhD in 1954. Moving to Cambridge University in 1956, he did researches on chlorophyll synthesis at the laboratory of George Wallace Kenner, a Fellow of the Royal Society, and secured another PhD in 1958. He returned to India the same year to resume his career at Delhi University and continued his researches on a senior research fellowship from the Indian National Science Academy. While serving as a reader from 1961, he received a UNESCO fellowship in 1966 which assisted him to continue his researches in Moscow which earned him the degree of Doctor of Science in 1967. Two years later, he was appointed as a professor and head of the department of chemistry at the University of Jammu where he stayed till 1973 when he moved to Himachal Pradesh University as the head of the chemistry department there. In 1978, he returned to Delhi University where he spent the rest of his career. In between, he had short stints at Texas Agricultural and Mechanical University (1986), Budapest University and University of Mauritius (1989–90) as a visiting professor.[1]
Working on polyphenols early in his research career, Jain elucidated the structure of several compounds in natural products.[6] It was during this period, he worked on the biogenesis of chlorophylls and developed new protocols for the synthesis of polyphenols. Later, he focused on the chemistry of flavonoids and isoflavonoids and is reported to have achieved the synthesis of a number of such products. He has published his research findings by way of over 275 articles published in peer-reviewed journals[note 1] and has authored a text book on organic chemistry. He guided 30 MPhil and 30 PhD students in their studies.[1] He is also associated with Indian Science Abstracts journal as a member of its editorial board.[7]
Amolak Chand Jain, Bhola Nath Sharma (November 1972). "Synthesis of (±)-7,3′- and 7,4′-di-O-methyleriodictyol and of velutin and pilloin". Phytochemistry. 12 (6): 1455–1458. doi:10.1016/0031-9422(73)80583-7.
Amolak Chand Jain, Surendra Mohan Anand (1974). "Claisen rearrangement of 1-hydroxy-3-(3-methylbut-2-enyloxy)xanthones". J. Chem. Soc., Perkin Trans. 1. 1: 329–333. doi:10.1039/P19740000329.
Amolak Chand Jain, Bhola Nath Sharma (1974). "Synthesis of alpinum isoflavone, osajin, and warangalone". J. Org. Chem. 39 (15): 2215–2217. doi:10.1021/jo00929a016.