Louis Pasteur once said, "chance favors the prepared mind." They did their science on the brink and were able to see the magic in a mistake, No. 10 - Saccharin trying to come up with new and interesting uses for coal tar. After a productive day at the office, he went home He asked his wife if she had done anything interesting to the rolls, but she hadn't. They tasted normal to her. The next day he went back to the lab and started tasting his work until he found the sweet spot. San Diego, one of the silicon chips she was working on burst. She discovered afterward, however,that the tiny pieces These teensy sensors can also be used to monitor the purity of drinking or seawater, to detect hazardous chemical (yes, really his name!) tried to silence a persnickety customer who kept sending french fries back to the kitchen coneswere invented at the 1904 World's Fair in St. Louis.But no food-vention has had as much success as Coke. and don't ask, because we don't know; The recipe is still a closely guarded secret. It only took eight years of being sold Young DuPont chemist Roy Plunkett was working to make a new a new kind of CFC. he could produce the refrigerant he wanted. So, to start his experiment Plunkett got a whole bunch of TFE gas, When the time came to open the container and put the TFE and hydrochloric acid together so they could react, Plunkett took off the top of the canister and shook it. Out came some fine white flakes. and handed them off to other scientists at DuPont. Nothing was having the effect he wanted. One day he spilled a mixture of rubber, sulfur and lead onto a hot stove. he noticed that the mixture had hardened but was still quite usable. At last! to shoes, to hockey pucks. No. 5 - Plastic if he could produce a shellac alternative. Instead his experiments yielded a moldable material that could take high temperatures the product had thousands of uses. Today plastic, which was derived from Bakelite, is used for everything from telephones Two words that you don't ever want to hear said in the same sentence are "Whoops!" and "radioactive." Back in 1896 Becquerel was fascinated by two things: natural fluorescence and the newfangled X-ray. after they had been left out in the sun. He left his equipment wrapped up together in a drawer and waited for a sunny day. on a photographic plate without being exposed to sunlight first. he discovered that that something was radioactivity. No. 3 - Mauve Confused? Don't be. Instead of a malaria treatment, his experiments produced a thick murky mess. Turns out he had made the first-ever synthetic dye. more vibrant, and didn't fade or wash out. for a whole generation of curious-minded people. But the story is not over yet. who used Perkin's dyes to pioneer immunology and chemotherapy. But it's not flubber clocking in at No. 2, it's a life saving medical device. Wilson Greatbatchreached into a box and pulled out the wrong thing. It's true. He reached into a box for a resistor in order to finish the circuit and pulled out a 1-megaohm resistor Then it repeated. The sound was as old as man: a perfect heartbeat.
Saccharin, the sweetener in the pink packet, was discovered because chemist Constantin Fahlberg
No. 9 - Smart Dust
Most people would be pretty upset if their homework blew up in their faces and crumbled into a bunch of tiny pieces.
No. 8 - Coke
There are many stories of accidentally invented food: the potato chip was born when cook George Crum
No. 7- Teflon
After all the damage they've done to the ozone layer, chlorofluorocarbons, or CFCs, are persona non grata.
No. 6 - Vulcanized Rubber
Charles Goodyear had been waiting years for a happy accident when it finally occurred.
In 1907 shellac was used as insulation in electronics. It was costing the industry a pretty penny to import shellac,
No. 4 - Radioactivity
Talk about strange connections - 18-year-old chemist William Perkin wanted to cure malaria;
No. 2 - Pacemaker This list wouldn't be complete without at least one absent-minded professor.
No. 1 - Penicillin
That's OK. As one of the most famous and fortunate accidents of the 20th century, penicillin belongs at No.
1 on this list. If you've been living under a rock for the past 80 years or so, here's how the popular story goes:Alexander Fleming didn't clean up his workstation before going on vacation one day in 1928.
When he came back, Fleming noticed that there was a strange fungus on some of his cultures.Even stranger was that bacteria didn't seem to thrive near those cultures.
Penicillin became the first and is still one of the most widely used antibiotics.| www.keralites.net |
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