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Edward Acheson
Carborandum
Edward Acheson (1856-1931) Edward Goodrich Acheson, inventor of carborundum,
was born in Washington, Pennsylvania on March 9, 1856. Carborandum, a substance
he developed in his laboratory, became known as a highly effective abrasive
used in manufacturing, and was an important influence during the industrial
era.
As a child, Acheson had been fascinated by engineering and mathematics. When
his father died Acheson, still a teenager, was forced to go to work, so he did
various railroad jobs and did experiments after hours. He became interested
in the electrical field and decided to work for a manufacturer of electrical
equipment. He first applied to Edward Weston who made electroplating dynamos
but was turned down. But the, at the age of 25, he was able to secure a position
with Thomas Edison
in his Menlo Park, New Jersey, laboratories.
In Edisonís Lab, Acheson worked on the development and installation of electrical
lighting, including working on the lamp exhibit at the Paris Exhibition in 1881.
Edison himself had quickly recognized his inventive genius and made him an assistant
chief engineer.
Acheson returned to New York in 1884 and became superintendent of a plant
manufacturing lamps that competed with those invented by Edison. Acheson soon
started doing experiments of his own. He first tried heating carbon to the point
at which a diamond would result in an attempt to create a strong and durable
industrial abrasive. This process failed, so Acheson began mixing clay with
carbon and electrically fusing it. The product that resulted had several shiny
specks that were hard enough to scratch glass. It was silicon carbide. However,
because he at first mistakenly thought the crystals were a compound of carbon
and alumina from the clay, he devised the trademark carborundum, after corundum,
the mineral composed of fused alumina. In 1893 he received a patent on the substance.
Soon after Acheson came up with the process for creating carborandum, many
realized that the mass production manufacturing of precision-ground, interchangeable
metal parts would be practically impossible without the substance. The hardest
surface made by man and second only to diamond in hardness, carborandum ended
the search for a highly effective and durable abrasive that industry had so
badly needed. Acheson established a manufacturing plant for carborundum in Monongohela,
Pennsylvania, but demand for the product soon exceeded his ability to supply
it, so he built a larger plant in 1895 in Niagara Falls.
Meanwhile, in the mid 1890s, Acheson discovered that overheating carborundum
produced almost pure graphite. While studying the effects of high temperature
on carborundum, he had found that silicon vaporizes at about 4,150¤ C (7,500¤
F), leaving behind graphitic carbon. This graphite was another major discovery
for him, and it became extremely valuable and helpful as a lubricant. The Acheson
Graphite Co. was formed in 1899. In 1928 this company was merged with National
Carbon Co (now Union Carbide). Acheson
also developed a variety of colloidal graphite products including Oildag and
Aquadag. These were later manufactured by the Acheson Colloids Co. (now Acheson
Industries).
Over the course of his career Acheson received a total of 70 patents relating
to abrasives, graphite products, reduction of oxides, and refractories. Acheson
received many honors and awards including the Perkin
Medal and an honorary doctoral degree from the University
of Pittsburgh. In 1928, he used his own funds to establish what is known
as the Edward Goodrich
Acheson Award. He was the first recipient of the award in 1929.
In 1908 the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
awarded Dr. Acheson the Count Rumford Medal for his applications of heat in
the electric furnace for industrial purposes. He was awarded the John
Scott Medal by the Franklin Institute in 1894 for the invention of carborundum,
and in 1901 for the invention of artificial graphite. Dr. Acheson also received
the Grand Prix at the Exposition Universelle Internationale, Paris in 1900,
the Gold Medal at Pan-American Exposition of 1901 for artificial graphite, and
the Grand Prize at the Louisiana Purchase Exposition in 1904 for carborundum
and artificial graphite. He died on July 6, 1931.
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