Inductees...
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Aylsworth, Jonas
Bachner, Edward F.
Bacon, Clare E.
Baekeland, Leo
Baer, Eric
Bailey, James
Beall, Glen
Beetle, Carl
Belcher, Sameul L.
Bishop, Richard
Black, Otis
Blount, Clint
Boeschenstein, H
Borro, Edward
Boyer, Raymond
Bradbury, Williamry
Bradt, Rexford H.
Breskin, Charles
Brown, Gordon
Burroughs, Charles
Carothers, Wallace
Chapman, Frank
Cleworth, C. W.
Condit, Charles
Conley, Fred
Cruse, William
Deanin, Rudolph
DeBell, John
Delmonte, John
Doak, Kenneth
Dow, Willard
Doyle, Bernard
Dreyfus, Camille
Dubois, J. Harry
Eastman, George
Ehlers, Russell
Ellis, Carleton
Erikson, Erik
Estabrook, Jr., F. R.
Flory, Paul
Forger, Robert
Foster, Joseph
Fox, Daniel W.
Gatto, Charles
Gigliotti, M. F. X.
Goggin, William
Goldsworthy, W.B.
Gore, Wilbert
Grebe, John
Griffith, Henry E.
Griffith, Palmer
Gross, Sid
Grote, Sr., Walter
Haine, Walter
Hanford, William
Harding, Ralph
Heckman, Jerome
Hemming, Emile
Hendrie, George
Hobson, Edwin L.
Hoffer, Robert
Hohl, John
Holz, Harold A.
Huidekoper, P.
Humphrey, G. P.
Huntsman, Jon
Hyatt, John Wesley
Hyde, J.F.
Jennings, Garland
Karol, Frederick J.
Kavanaugh, Lionel
Keville, John
Kleiderer, C. W.
Kline, Gordon M.
Kretzschmar, J. R.
Kruder, George A.
Kwolek, S. L.
Land, Edwin H.
Lankton, Gordon
Lester, William M.
Lubin, George
Maccaferri, Mario
Maddock, Bruce H.
Mark, Herman F.
Marra, Frank S.
Marshall, Abraham
Martinelli, Guy A.
Marvel, Carl Shipp
McGrath, James E.
Morrison, Robert S.
Muehlstein, Herman
Nalle, Jr., George S.
Nissel, Frank R.
Ott, Emile
Palmer, Spencer E.
Peters, Don. L.
Pitcher, Arnold E.
Plueddemann, E.
Plunkett, Roy J.
Porter, Roger S.
Quarnstrom, Ivar
Rahm, Louis Frank
Reib, John C.
Reinhart, Frank W.
Richardson, Henry
Robertson, Harold
Rosato, Dominick V.
Rowan, Sr., Edward
Rubens, L.C. "Bud"
Rubin, Irvin I.
Schwab, Fred E.
Scribner, George K.
Seabury, R. W.
Semon, Waldo L.
Seymour, R. B.
Shaw, Frank H.
Shaw, Louis E.
Sherwood, Miller G.
Slater, John G.
Spaak, Albert
Stein, Richard S.
Stott, Lewis L.
Stoughton, T. S.
Swedlow, David A.
Thomas, Islyn
Tupper, Earl S.
Von Holdt, John
Whitlock, Carl
Willert, William H.
Wyeth, N. C.
Zimmerman, A. S.
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Roy J. Plunkett - Hall of Fame Entry
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Author: Plastics Academy Staff
Added: 03/29/2004
Type: Summary
Viewed: 562 time(s)
[ Not Rated Yet ] |
Roy J. Plunkett - Hall of Fame Entry
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Roy J. Plunkett
Birthdate: N/A
Deceased: N/A
Induction: 1973 Industry Areas: Material |
Researcher, discoverer of Teflon tetrafluoroethylene resin in 1938, director of operations of the Freon Products Div. of the Organic Chemicals Dept., DuPont Co. Joined the company in 1936. Leadership in the management of research, development, and production has led to numerous new fluorochemical products and processes.
The discovery of polytetrafluoroethylene resin appears in retrospect to have been more than a turning point in fluorine chemistry. It spawned a whole family of new plastics and resins.
It occurred on April 6, 1938, when I opened a steel cylinder that had contained tetrafluoroethylene and found that it had polymerized to a white waxy solid. From this came the development, at DuPont, of Teflon polytetrafluoroethylene resin.
So many useful inventions stemmed from this event that it is difficult to accept the fact that the field of fluorine chemistry was considered to be somewhat "mature" at the time, with really no new development in sight.
From its beginning, Teflon was a stimulus to research leading to a range of useful developments -- an elastomer with excellent resistance to heat, oxidizing conditions, and chemical attack. Today it is serving in gaskets, seals, tubing, and other flexible forms used in severe temperature and chemical conditions. It also led to the development of stain- and moisture-resistant coatings for apparel, carpets, upholstery, and other textile products. Other developments were a grease- and moisture-resistant coating for paper and ingredients in weather-resistant paints. A resistant film was developed that is used for low-maintenance building exteriors.
The early difficulty in learning to fabricate and shape TFE resin gradually gave way to the point where it was possible to form it into a fiber. Textiles made from it are used to make fabric bearings so flow- resistant that they can be used to support bridges.
In the 1950s, copolymers were developed that retained most of the chemical stability and mechanical properties of the original TFE polymer, yet molded or extruded like polyethylene.
After 35 years of development, I see little sign of a slowdown. One indication of still another round of discovery lies in work going on with the perfluorosulfonic compounds -- sometimes called plastic acids. Unlike Teflon, with its well-known hydrophobic property, this new material is one of the most hydrophilic. In the form of a plastic membrane, it performs as a sort of "traffic controller" in separating dissolved solids with great potential impact on electrochemical and chemical processes. Long range, those membranes should have great environmental benefit because they perform separations without requiring heat for vaporization or crystallization and because they can have direct use in pollutant-free processes or in converting pollutants into valuable products. In one city, a membrane-equipped device has been in use for over a year to disinfect sewer water during storm conditions. The basic resin can be made into tubing, laminates, filaments, and fiber.
Even with this sustained flow of new fluoroplastics, the rest of this century will not see them grow in rank as one of the largest families of plastics. But in terms of benefit to mankind and in potential for further development, the outlook is bright. After more than 37 years of working in this field, I am proud to have been a first-hand observer of this growth. |
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