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Failed refrigeration test in 1938 sparks Teflon discovery with heatproof and ultra slippery breakthrough

Science
Published on 15 May 2026
Failed refrigeration test in 1938 sparks Teflon discovery with heatproof and ultra slippery breakthrough

A blocked cylinder turned into the lab’s biggest surprise

In 1938, chemist Roy Plunkett was testing refrigerant gases when a cylinder he expected to contain a gas was instead blocked and, upon opening, lined with a white, waxy substance. That material proved to be polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), better known as Teflon, later prized for extreme stability, heat resistance, chemical resistance, and very low surface energy—key to the non-stick reputation. Its widespread industrial use grew after World War II as fluoropolymers gained traction.

  • The discovery happened in 1938 in Roy Plunkett’s lab
  • A refrigerant cylinder was blocked, then opened to find white waxy residue
  • The substance was identified as polytetrafluoroethylene PTFE
  • PTFE’s carbon-fluorine bonds drive high heat and chemical resistance
  • PTFE’s very low surface energy enables the non-stick Teflon effect
  • Broad industrial adoption accelerated after World War II
Read the full story at The Economic Times

This summarization was done by Beige for a story published on The Economic TimesThe Economic Times

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