Re-enactment of the 1938 discovery of Teflon. Left to right, Jack Rebok, Robert McHarness, and Roy Plunkett.
Courtesy Hagley Museum and Library.
From the 1930s to the present, beginning with neoprene and nylon, the American chemical industry has introduced a cornucopia of polymers to the consumer. Teflon, discovered by Roy Plunkett (1910–1994) at DuPont's Jackson Laboratory in 1938, was an accidental invention—unlike most of the other polymer products. But as Plunkett often told student audiences, his mind was prepared by education and training to recognize novelty.
As a poor Ohio farm boy during the Depression, Plunkett attended Manchester College, operated by the Church of the Brethren. His roommate for a time at this small college was Paul Flory, who would win the 1984 Nobel Prize in chemistry for his contributions to the theory of polymers. Like Flory, Plunkett went on to Ohio State University for a doctorate, and also like Flory he was hired by DuPont. Unlike Flory, Plunkett made his entire career at DuPont.
Roy J. Plunkett with a cable insulated with Teflon and a Teflon-coated muffin tin.
Gift of Roy Plunkett. Courtesy Hagley Museum and Library.
At first it seemed that Teflon was so expensive to produce that it would never find a market. Its first use was fulfilling the requirements of the gaseous diffusion process of the Manhattan Project for materials that could resist corrosion by fluorine or its compounds (see Ralph Landau). Teflon pots and pans were invented years later. The awarding of Philadelphia's Scott Medal in 1960 to Plunkett—the first of many honors for his discovery—provided the occasion for the introduction of Teflon bakeware to the public: each guest at the banquet went home with a Teflon-coated muffin tin.
