(Roughly) Daily

Posts Tagged ‘Washington Sheffeld

“While there might be a bit of genius in what we create, the real genius rests in whoever created the essential materials without which we could not create.”*…

A scientist wearing safety gear, including a helmet and gloves, operates equipment in a laboratory setting, manipulating a sample with a precision tool.
A dip in a special salt bath is what gives Gorilla Glass its damage-resistant properties.

Ben Reinhardt on how to mass-produce the new substances on which the cavalcade of wonders that populate ours lives depend…

I’m writing these words using plastic keys, on a composite wood desk, looking at a Gorilla Glass screen. The screen is linked to a machined-aluminum computer, inside of which doped silicon switches on and off a billion times per second.

One hundred and fifty years ago, not a single one of these materials existed.

Materials are not charismatic technologies like cars or computers. Yet they enable almost every one of humanity’s technical achievements: rebar unlocked the skyscrapers of the 1920s; chemically strengthened glass delivered us smartphones; and stainless steel, not created until 1913, brought with it the clinical equipment upon which modern medicine depends.

New materials create fundamentally new human capabilities. And yet, despite university teams regularly announcing triumphantly that they’ve created a material with seemingly magical properties like artificial muscles made out of carbon nanotubes or ‘limitless power’ from graphene, new materials-enabled human capabilities have been rare in the past 50 years.

Why is there such a gap between headlines and reality when it comes to new materials? Is there anything we can do about it?

The only way to answer those questions is to understand how a material goes from a tiny test tube sample to a commodity measured in megatons. Each step in the process requires different skills, mindsets, and resources. Each step is also governed by different incentives that make sense locally but create deadly traps for the entire process. Bypassing these traps needs systems-level solutions that take into account each step of the process – whether in policy, organizational reform, or new institutions – and unlock the progress that new materials enable…

Fascinating: “Getting materials out of the lab,” from @benjaminreinhardt.com in @worksinprogress.bsky.social‬.‬

See also: “The Wonder of Modern Drywall.”

(Image above: source)

Craig D. Lounsbrough

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As we celebrate stuff, we might recall that it was on this date in 1892 that Dr. Washington Sheffeld, a pioneering dentist and dental surgeon, invented the collapsible metal toothpaste tube– making dental hygiene easier– and thus more regular– for millions. His original toothpaste recipe continues to be packaged and sold as “Dr. Sheffield’s: The Original Toothpaste.”

Portrait of Dr. Washington Sheffield, a 19th-century dentist known for inventing the collapsible metal toothpaste tube.

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Written by (Roughly) Daily

May 22, 2025 at 1:00 am