He was born in Kraljske Bare, near Andrijevica, on 1 January 1896, to father Milonja and mother Ružica, nee Novović.
He continued his education in Belgrade, where he finished the grades from the fourth to the seventh (1910-1914) in the Second Men's Gymnasium.
The First World War prevented him from finishing the eighth grade of high school because he joined the military in 1914 as a student sergeant in the Royal Battalion in Montenegro.
In 1919, he finished the eighth grade of the Second Men's Gymnasium in Belgrade, passed the matriculation exam and enrolled at the Faculty of Philosophy, departments of chemistry and physics.
He worked on his doctoral dissertation for two years at the Institute of Chemistry of the University of Nancy (1926-1928) as a scholarship holder of the French government, with Professor Vavon.
Immediately after the war, only professors Milivoje Lozanić and Vukić Mićović and assistant Sergije Lebedev were at the Department of Chemistry.
[3] Mićović published a large number of scientific papers in various fields of organic chemistry: the construction of alicyclic nuclei and synthetic glycerols of the structure of esters of dicarbonate acids, determination of the constitution of quinidine carbonic acids, systematic studies on reductions by means of lithium aluminum hydride,[4] reactions of aliphatic alcohols with lead tetracitate, studies on the chemical composition of lichens of Serbia.