My, my, time does roll around, doesn’t it? Seems like only
yesterday I was writing about Beatrice
Shilling, the woman who solved one of the more important engineering
problems for the Royal Air Force during World War II. But, here we are at Ada Lovelace Day again, and I’m spoilt for
choice in terms of subject matter.
But since I’m a military historian, I’ll stay with my
area of expertise (a couple of years ago I introduced you to Joan
Strothers Curran, who developed “window” or “chaff”, which was successfully
used to confuse German radar reception in aid of D-Day). I’m honoring Stephanie
L. Kwolek, the chemist whose curiosity led to the synthetic fiber we now
know as Kevlar.
Kwolek, who died in June at age 90, actually took the job
with the textile chemistry division of the DuPont Company as a temporary
measure between undergraduate study and medical school. (As a child, she loved
sewing and working with fabrics, but her mother convinced her that she wouldn’t
make a good fashion designer because she was such a perfectionist; so she gave
that up for medicine.) But she found the research she was doing into polymers
so interesting that she decided she was where she should be and dug in.
It was in the mid-1960s, while she was looking into the
creation of fibers capable of performing in extreme conditions, that she came
across something that didn’t emerge from the process as expected—instead of a
clear, syrupy liquid, it was thin and opaque. Ordinarily this sort of
disappointing output would have been thrown away (which is what her colleagues
wanted to do), but Kwolek was curious. She persuaded one of them to run it
through a spinning process to remove liquid solvent and reveal fibers.
What came out of the spinneret was an exceptionally stiff
fiber that tested five times as strong as steel of equal weight. It was also
fire resistant. The DuPont crowd latched onto its potential right away—Kevlar
has been used by law enforcement officers and combat troops since the mid-70s.
It’s integral to body armor and helmets that deflect handgun and rifle fire, as
well as shrapnel (which is ugly, ugly stuff).
Additionally, the fiber is used in tires, sporting equipment,
cables and cellular phones.
Here’s what I really like about Kwolek: she was curious.
She saw possibilities where her colleagues saw useless goop. She was willing to
push for further information, again and again. She saw connections and tested
everything. She was a successful and respected professional in an industry that
typically expects those qualities to come in a package containing the Y
chromosome and advanced degrees. And she shared her experience, her expertise
and her enthusiasm, inspiring generations of potential scientists.
A paper she co-wrote for the Journal of Chemical Education in 1959, “The Nylon Rope Trick”,
describes how to demonstrate condensation polymerization in a beaker at
atmospheric pressure and room temperature. Yeah, beyond me, too, but it’s
commonly demonstrated in classrooms around the country.
It’s possible that someone would have come up with a
Kevlar-like fiber eventually, but Stephanie L. Kwolek got there first, doing
what she loved. Saving thousands of lives, doing what you love; it don’t get
any better than that.
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