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Alexander
Parkes
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Alexander Parkes was a Birmingham inventor born in 1813 and credited
with making the first man-made plastic. His ground breaking work paved
the way for the manufacturing of plastic products.
Alexander
Parkes was the son of a lock manufacturer who excelled at metallurgy
and was respsonsible for numeruous inventions, the most famous of which
include:
- inventing a process of removing silver from lead using molten zinc - the cold vulcanization process - the invention of parkesine ( later developed into culluloid )
In
total Parkes was awarded 66 patents of which most relate to metallurgy.
It was his vulcanization process on cloth that was responsible for the
Macintosh coat which became a household name and a product valued for
its waterproof qualities.
Parkes
most famous work involved plastics and it was his invention of
Parkesine that would go on to revolutionise the world we live in. He
started by experimenting in an effort to find a substance with
properties that would copy ivory and horn.
Alexander Parkes
formed a company to produce his new product but his business failed.
Parkes was an inventor and not a businessman. Whilst he could see the
benefit that his inventions would bring to the world he had difficulty
turning them into a commercial enterprise.
It was left
to the Hyatt Brothers in the USA to take plastics to the next
level and final commercial viability through mixing camphor with
nitrate cellulose to make it more pliable, thus was born the new age of
plastics.
Alexander Parkes retired to London where he died in 1890.
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