Timeline of materials technology
Major innovations in materials technology
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BC
- 29,000–25,000 BC – First pottery appears
- 28,000 BC – People wear beads, bracelets, and pendants[1]
- 3rd millennium BC – Copper metallurgy is invented and copper is used for ornamentation
- 2nd millennium BC – Bronze is used for weapons and armor
- 16th century BC – The Hittites develop crude iron metallurgy
- 13th century BC – Invention of steel when iron and charcoal are combined properly
- 10th century BC – Glass production begins in ancient Near East
- 1st millennium BC – Pewter beginning to be used in China and Egypt
- 1000 BC – The Phoenicians introduce dyes made from the purple murex.[1]
- 3rd century BC – Wootz steel, the first crucible steel, is invented in ancient India
- 50s BC – Glassblowing techniques flourish in Phoenicia
- 20s BC – Roman architect Vitruvius describes low-water-content method for mixing concrete
1st millennium
- 3rd century – Cast iron widely used in Han Dynasty China
- 300 – Greek alechmist Zomius, summarizing the work of Egyptian alchemists, describes arsenic and lead acetate[1]
- 4th century – Iron pillar of Delhi is the oldest surviving example of corrosion-resistant steel
- 671 – Kallinikos of Byzantium invents a missile weapon made of sulfur, resin, rocksalt, and petroleum that can set targets on fire, called Greek fire[1]
- 720 – Abu Masa Dshaffar discovers sulfuric acid, nitric acid, aqua regia, and silver nitrate[1]
- 750 – Geber, an Arabian alchemist, describes the preparation of aluminum chloride, white lead, nitric acid, and acetic acid[1]
- 8th century – Porcelain is invented in Tang Dynasty China
- 8th century – Tin-glazing of ceramics invented by Arabic chemists and potters in Basra, Iraq[2]:1
- 9th century – Stonepaste ceramics invented in Iraq[2]:5
- 900 – Al-razi, known as Rhazes, a Persian physician and alchemist, describes the preparation of plaster of Paris and metallic antimony[1]
- 9th century – Lustreware appears in Mesopotamia[3]:86–87
2nd millennium
- 1000 – Gunpowder is developed in China[1]
- 1340 – In Liège, Belgium, the first blast furnaces for the production of iron are developed[1]
- 1448 – Johann Gutenberg develops type metal alloy
- 1450s – Cristallo, a clear soda-based glass, is invented by Angelo Barovier
- 1540 – Vannoccio Biringuccio publishes first systematic book on metallurgy
- 1556 – Georg Agricola's influential book on metallurgy
- 1590 – Glass lenses are developed in the Netherlands and used for the first time in microscopes and telescopes
- 1664 – In the pipes supplying water to the gardens at Versailles, cast iron is used[1]
18th century
- 1717 – Abraham Darby makes iron with coke, a derivative of coal[1]
- 1738 – Metallic zinc processed by distillation from calamine and charcoal patented by William Champion
- 1740 – Crucible steel technique developed by Benjamin Huntsman
- 1774 –
- 1779 – Hydraulic cement (stucco) patented by Bryan Higgins for use as an exterior plaster
- 1799 – Acid battery made from copper/zinc by Alessandro Volta
19th century
- 1821 – Thermocouple invented by Thomas Johann Seebeck
- 1824 – Portland cement patent issued to Joseph Aspdin
- 1825 – Metallic aluminum produced by Hans Christian Ørsted
- 1839 – Vulcanized rubber invented by Charles Goodyear
- 1839 – Silver-based photographic processes invented by Louis Daguerre and William Fox Talbot
- 1855 – Bessemer process for mass production of steel patented by Henry Bessemer
- 1861 – Color photography demonstrated by James Clerk Maxwell
- 1883 – First solar cells using selenium waffles made by Charles Fritts
20th century
- 1902 – Synthetic rubies created by the Verneuil process developed by Auguste Verneuil
- 1908 - Cellophane invented by Jacques E. Brandenberger
- 1909 – Bakelite hard thermosetting plastic presented by Leo Baekeland
- 1911 – Superconductivity discovered by Heike Kamerlingh Onnes
- 1912 – Stainless steel invented by Harry Brearley
- 1916 – Method for growing single crystals of metals invented by Jan Czochralski
- 1924 – Pyrex invented by scientists at Corning Incorporated, a glass with a very low coefficient of thermal expansion
- 1931 – synthetic rubber called neoprene developed by Julius Nieuwland (see also: E.K. Bolton, Wallace Carothers)
- 1931 – Nylon developed by Wallace Carothers
- 1938 – The process for making poly-tetrafluoroethylene, better known as Teflon discovered by Roy Plunkett
- 1939 – Dislocations in metals confirmed by Robert W. Cahn
- 1947 – First germanium point-contact transistor invented
- 1947 – First commercial application of a piezoelectric ceramic: barium titanate used as a phonograph pickup
- 1951 – Individual atoms seen for the first time using the field ion microscope
- 1953 – Metallic catalysts which greatly improve the strength of polyethylene polymers discovered by Karl Ziegler
- 1954 – Silicon solar cells with 6% efficiency made at Bell Laboratories
- 1954 – Argon oxygen decarburization (AOD) refining invented by scientists at the Union Carbide Corporation
- 1959 – Float glass process patented by the Pilkington Brothers
- 1962 – SQUID superconducting quantum interference device invented
- 1968 – Liquid crystal display developed by RCA
- 1970 – Silica optical fibers grown by Corning Incorporated
- 1980 – Duplex stainless steels developed which resist oxidation in chlorides
- 1984 – Fold-forming system developed by Charles Lewton-Brain to produce complex three dimensional forms rapidly from sheet metal
- 1985 - The first fullerene molecule discovered by scientists at Rice University (see also: Timeline of carbon nanotubes)
- 1986 - The first high temperature superconductor is discovered by Georg Bednorz and K. Alex Müller
See also
- Timeline of historic inventions
- List of inventions named after people
- Materials science
- Roman metallurgy
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Volume Library 1. The Southwestern Company. 2009.
- 1 2 Mason, Robert B. (1995). "New Looks at Old Pots: Results of Recent Multidisciplinary Studies of Glazed Ceramics from the Islamic World". Muqarnas: Annual on Islamic Art and Architecture (Brill Academic Publishers) XII. doi:10.2307/1523219. ISBN 90-04-10314-7.
- ↑ Emmanuel Cooper (2000). Ten thousand years of pottery (4th ed.). University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 0-8122-3554-1.
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