Accidental Inventions You Can’t Imagine Life Without
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November 26, 2024
•19 min read
Here are some totally accidental inventions you can't imagine life without!
Accidents happen but sometimes making a mistake can lead to something incredible. In fact, some of your favorite junk foods, your life-saving medicines, and even your breakfast cereals were made completely by mistake! Here are the accidental inventions I bet you can’t imagine life without!
Safety Pin
A safety pin is always helpful in minor accidents, and ironically, they were invented by accident too! The year was 1849, the place New York, and mechanic Walter Hunt was sitting at his desk, stressing over a $15 debt he owed. That was a lot of money to be worried about in those days, in fact, it was the equivalent of $600 today!
But, as luck would have it, he suddenly found the solution to his problems. He was fiddling with a piece of brass wire, bending it in and out of shape. Suddenly inspired, he created a spring mechanism, which allowed it to securely clasp and unclasp.
Teflon
If you’re a fan of pancakes, then you’ll know the importance of a non-stick pan. Thankfully, the invention of Teflon has made flipping these golden disks of joy possible time and time again without them sticking to the bottom of the pan!
In 1938, American chemist Roy Plunkett was trying to create refrigerants; fluids which are used in the refrigeration cycle of air conditioning and heat pumps. He was using tetrafluoroethylene, a flammable gas, and due to a lack of space in his lab, he decided to freeze some samples. When he checked on them later, he found the gas had polymerized into a solid, white substance! Polymerization happens when small molecules, called monomers, chemically combine to make a chain of molecules, or a polymer. These monomers may be alike or may be composed of different substances, in this case, fluorspar, a mineral; hydrofluoric acid, a corrosive solution; chloroform, a toxic, colorless liquid, and water had all combined to produce Teflon! He discovered it was exceptionally slippery, unabsorbable, and resistant to chemical reactions, making it a strong and sturdy industrial material.
Penicillin
In 1928, Bacteriologist Alexander Fleming was working at St. Mary’s Hospital, London. When he came back from vacation one day, he found mold growing on a petri dish full of bacteria. He then noticed something he’d never seen before, the mold was preventing the bacteria from growing around it!
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Dynamite
Ironically, the guy that invented dynamite also founded the Nobel Peace Prize. Seems a bit contradictory, as you’re either for blowing up stuff, or against blowing up stuff. However, it turns out he actually created dynamite by accident!
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Play-Doh
No one forgets the smell of Play-Doh, it instantly takes you back to your early childhood. What you might not know is that it originally started out as a cleaning product. In the 1920s, Cleo McVicker worked for Kutol Products soap company in Ohio. But by 1933 it was going out of business, and in an effort to save it, McVicker and his brother came up with a new invention. It was a non-toxic substance made from water, flour and salt, used to wipe away soot from wallpaper.
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Popsicle
No summer is complete without a popsicle, right? And as a classic treat for kids, it makes sense that it was actually invented by a kid! That’s right, the popsicle was created in California by Frank Epperson when he was only 11!
In 1905 he mixed powdered soda and water together in a cup, put a stirring stick in it, and left it on the porch by mistake. Then, during the winter night it froze solid, and when he lifted it out the next day, the sweet frozen treat on a stick was born! Epperson began selling his creation, which he called an Eppsicle, the Epperson icicle, around the neighborhood, and everyone loved it.
We hope everyone has a happy and safe #4thofJuly . Here is a #patent from 1924 for "frozen confectionery." Who knew that popsicles are nearly 100 years old? #patents #4thofJulyWeekend #uspto #heatwave
Pacemaker
Maybe you know someone who has an implanted pacemaker, or you have one yourself! These small battery-powered devices treat abnormal heart rhythms, and are implanted in the body to deliver small electrical pulses to keep your heart beating normally.
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Post-It Notes
Post-It Notes are kings of the stationary world! They’re great for organizing your stuff, keeping track of your plans, and making crazy detective boards.
They were invented by American scientist Spencer Silver, who, in 1968, had been tasked with creating the ultimate adhesive. By happy accident, he actually produced a weak adhesive instead. He’d mistakenly discovered microspheres; these are microscopic particles that stick to surfaces, but don’t leave any damage behind.
X-Ray Machines
Have you ever broken a bone? Thanks to X-ray machines, doctors are able to look inside our bodies non-invasively, no scalpels required. But broken bones aren’t the only thing that can happen by accident, it turns out X-rays themselves were accidentally discovered back in 1895!
German physicist Wilhelm Röntgen was studying cathode ray tubes, devices that can produce images from electron beams, later used to power early TVs and radios. He wanted to know if these rays could travel beyond the tube, so he applied a high voltage and saw it was emitting light through the black cardboard covering the end of the tube.
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Smoke Detector
Ever burned your toast and set off your smoke detector? As life-saving as these early fire-warning systems are, they can be so annoying. But we’re actually lucky to have them at all, because the modern smoke detector was invented completely by accident back in 1930!
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Corn Flakes
Kellogg is a name that’s pretty ubiquitous with at least one cereal: cornflakes! But in the 1890s, John Kellogg wasn’t on a mission to create something nutritious and healthy, but something bland. At the time, he was working at Battle Creek Sanitarium in Michigan and wanted to make a dull, wheat-based meal for his patients as he believed foods could influence their mental state. Ergo, bland food would keep the patients calm.
The story goes that John, or his brother Will, rolled out some wheat dough, forgot about it and accidentally left it overnight. In the morning, they discovered that the dough had become weirdly flaky. Instead of wasting the food, they decided to bake the flakes they had unintentionally created, and that’s when the first cornflake was born!
Rubber
Before vulcanized rubber came along, your shoes might’ve melted in the hot weather, and your raincoat might’ve cracked up in the cold! These products were made from natural rubber, sourced from trees in Asia, South America, and Africa. Because of its tricky composition, the rubber industry was desperate for a solution.
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Silly Putty
Ironically, silly putty was born from a very serious situation. The year was 1943, right in the middle of WWII. Inventor James Wright was working in a lab in Connecticut, trying to create a synthetic rubber. The Axis forces had cut off 90% of the natural rubber supply to America, which was used in everything from car tires to machinery, and America was facing an imminent shortage.
But, in trying to create a strong and hardy synthetic rubber, he accidentally created the complete opposite! He mixed boric acid and silicone oil, which formed a stretchy goo. While it was too thin and springy for rubber, it was a massive hit at parties! Eventually, it caught the eye of Peter Hodgson, a toy marketer, who smelled a winning product. Once he started distributing it in 1950, it sold 250,000 units in the first three days. Even astronauts took it up to space with them in 1968! It might not have helped the war effort, but it has entertained thousands of kids for the best part of a century!Velcro
Velcro is one of those things that seems like such a simple concept, you wonder how it’s not been around for forever! A lot of tiny hooks that attach to tiny loops to make a fastening seems so obvious, and yet Swiss engineer George De Mestral actually came up with the invention by accident!
Super Glue
Super-glue can be your best friend and your worst enemy. You might have successfully fixed that shelf, but not without gluing your fingers together first! If you want to know who came up with this incredible, yet frustrating invention, let me introduce you to Harry Coover.
Back In 1942, in the middle of World War 2 again, he was trying to produce clear plastic gun sights for Allied soldiers, but instead he created a new adhesive compound called cyanoacrylate, after finding himself in a sticky situation. He realized it was useless for making any sort of plastic, so he abandoned it, but that’s not the end of the story.
Chocolate Chip Cookies
Chocolate chip cookies are my favorite! They’re one of the most popular cookies in the world. But they weren’t always. As classic as they taste, they were only invented back in the 1930’s by Ruth Wakefield in Massachusetts. That seems a little late, as we tend to think that these cookies have been around forever, eaten by medieval royalty, or found in Plato’s packed lunch! Well, not quite.
There is evidence of these cookies sold as far back as 1928, and there have undoubtedly been versions made in the years before that. But Wakefield’s was a more refined adaptation, with a crunchier texture, a slight butterscotch flavor, and a recipe that combined the 19th century jumble cookie with the classic chocolate drop cookie. The story goes that she’d run out of baker’s chocolate to mix into her dough, so she resorted to a bar of sweet Nestle chocolate. She chopped it finely, hoping it would melt, but instead, it created chocolate ‘chips!’
Plastic
Look around you: something in your vicinity will certainly be made of plastic. It’s everywhere, and that’s not a good thing; from the disposable plastics that take hundreds of years to degrade in landfills, to the microplastics filling up our oceans.
It was chemist Leo Baekeland who invented the first ever fully synthetic plastic in 1907 in New York, and it was revolutionary. But he was actually trying to produce a substitute for shellac; a resin made from the lac insect. This was used for electrical insulation and, as the US was becoming increasingly dependent on electricity, Baekeland decided to jump on the bandwagon. But when he combined formaldehyde, a toxic, flammable gas, and phenol, a liquid compound found in mouthwash, under heat and pressure, he accidentally birthed a polymer that could be made into thousands of shapes. He named this moldable magic Bakelite.
Potato Chips
What would life be like without potato chips? Imagine, no crunchy snack bag of chips, no bowls of chips on movie night, no entire family-sized bag of chips to eat; it would be a disaster! Legend has it that they were invented by George Crum, a chef working at Moon’s Lake House restaurant in New York way back in 1853.
A diner, popularly thought to be business mogul Cornelius Vanderbilt, was unsatisfied with his meal, and sent his fried potatoes back to the kitchen for being too thick. So, out of sheer pettiness, Crum decided to slice them paper thin and fry them all to a crisp.
Coca-Cola
Over 2 billion servings of Coca-Cola are enjoyed globally every day, but originally, this fizzy brown liquid was sold as a tonic to cure nerves! Created by John Stith Pemberton, a pharmacist and soldier, he first developed it to help the pain caused by his battle wounds. Inspired by Vin Mariani, a type of French wine, he decided to make his own in 1886.
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