American Decades
Synthetic Rubber or Nylon?
The Nature of Rubber.
In the past rubber had to be imported from tropical lands where rubber trees grew. The material's strategic value was emphasized in World War I during the blockade of Germany, when shortages complicated the construction of military and civilian vehicles. After the war Du Pont began work on synthesizing artificial rubber. Using chloroprene, a product derived from acetylene, as a primary ingredient, the firm's chemists, in particular F. B. Downing, W. H. Carothers, and Ira Williams, eventually reached a satisfactory rubber substitute by incorporating substances derived from lime-stone, coal, salt, and water. The new product, christened "duprene" and introduced officially in late 1931, was intended to supplement natural rubber at first but already displayed one significant advantage in its properties, that of resisting the degrading effects of oxygen, kerosene, and gasoline. It also did not require the addition...
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1930's Science and Technology
- Overview
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Topics in the News
- Astronomy
- Atoms and More: Physics
- Chemistry
- The Decline of the Eugenics Movement
- Developments in Biology
- Earth Sciences
- Engineering in Bridge Building
- From Rails to Roads: the Plight of Roads and Railroads
- The Hoover Dam
- The Rise of the Airplane
- Ships in the Clouds: the Golden Age of Airships
- Synthetic Rubber or Nylon?
- Television
- Women in Science
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Awards
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Science and Technology, 1930–1939
