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Enro Rubik
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Born Dec 29, 1800 Died July 1, 1860
Improvements
Rubber
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Natural or India rubber, as it was then known, was of
limited usefulness to industry. Rubber products melted in hot weather, froze
and cracked in cold, and adhered to virtually everything until the day in the
mid-19th century when inventor Charles Goodyear accidentally dropped
some rubber mixed with sulphur on a hot stove.
Charles Goodyear's
discovery of what came to be known as vulcanization strengthened rubber so it
could be applied to a vast variety of industrial uses, including, eventually,
automobile tyres.
Charles Goodyear was born in New Haven, Connecticut. He
entered the hardware business with his father but the venture failed in 1830.
Thereafter he turned his talents to the commercial improvement of India rubber,
which, until his time, was not used much in industry because of the
adhesiveness of the surface and because of its inability to withstand
temperature extremes. After numerous experiments, in 1836 Charles Goodyear
developed a nitric acid treatment which partially remedied these defects. The
famous vulcanizing process, patented in 1844, was to revolutionized the rubber
industry, but Charles Goodyear was unable to profit financially from his
discovery. His numerous patents were constantly infringed, and although he was
able to establish his rights legally, he died a poor man.
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