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A failed chemical experiment. A forgotten chemist. And an accidental discovery that quietly reshaped the modern world.
In this episode of Smartest Year Ever, Gordy dives into Leo Baekeland's surprising invention of Bakelite—the first fully synthetic plastic. Originally just trying to replace an expensive bug-based resin used in electrical wiring, Baekeland ended up creating a material that didn’t melt, didn’t burn, and could be molded into almost anything.
What followed was a full-blown plastics revolution, launching a material once dubbed "the material of a thousand uses." But was it a blessing... or the beginning of a global trash problem?
This is the strange, sticky, world-changing origin story of the first plastic—and it all started by accident.
Sources:
Baekeland, L. H. (1909). The synthesis, constitution, and uses of Bakelite. Journal of Industrial and Engineering Chemistry.
Meikle, J. L. (1995). American Plastic: A Cultural History. Rutgers University Press.
Science History Institute. (n.d.). Bakelite: The First Plastic. https://www.sciencehistory.org
McKearin, H. (1959). The Bakelite Revolution. Antiques Magazine, 75.
National Museum of American History. (n.d.). Bakelite and the Age of Plastic. Smithsonian Institution Archives.
#Bakelite #plasticinvention #sciencefacts #materialscience #AccidentalGenius #plastic #DailyFacts Music thanks to Zapsplat.
A failed chemical experiment. A forgotten chemist. And an accidental discovery that quietly reshaped the modern world.
In this episode of Smartest Year Ever, Gordy dives into Leo Baekeland's surprising invention of Bakelite—the first fully synthetic plastic. Originally just trying to replace an expensive bug-based resin used in electrical wiring, Baekeland ended up creating a material that didn’t melt, didn’t burn, and could be molded into almost anything.
What followed was a full-blown plastics revolution, launching a material once dubbed "the material of a thousand uses." But was it a blessing... or the beginning of a global trash problem?
This is the strange, sticky, world-changing origin story of the first plastic—and it all started by accident.
Sources:
Baekeland, L. H. (1909). The synthesis, constitution, and uses of Bakelite. Journal of Industrial and Engineering Chemistry.
Meikle, J. L. (1995). American Plastic: A Cultural History. Rutgers University Press.
Science History Institute. (n.d.). Bakelite: The First Plastic. https://www.sciencehistory.org
McKearin, H. (1959). The Bakelite Revolution. Antiques Magazine, 75.
National Museum of American History. (n.d.). Bakelite and the Age of Plastic. Smithsonian Institution Archives.
#Bakelite #plasticinvention #sciencefacts #materialscience #AccidentalGenius #plastic #DailyFacts Music thanks to Zapsplat.