These amazing products were discovered by accident
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The unlikely way huge discoveries were made
Many amazing inventions took decades of hard work, but a surprising number of major breakthroughs were discovered completely by accident. Click or scroll through some of the biggest fluke discoveries, looking at how they happened and how they went on to shape the modern world.
Matches – 1826
John Walker was a pharmacist by day at his shop in Stockton-on-Tees, northern England, but in his spare time he often carried out experiments at home. He mixed chemicals in the hope of making a combustible paste for guns, however one day in 1826 he accidentally scraped his mixing stick on his hearth. The stick suddenly erupted into a flame, becoming the world’s first "match".
Matches – 1826
The moment revolutionised how fires could be started, as previously it had been much harder to set anything alight. Walker was selling his “Friction Light” matches within a year, packaging them in boxes with sandpaper strips. Sadly he failed to patent his invention – and within a few years, rival matchmakers had knocked his own firm out of business. The unfortunate inventor has a statue in his hometown, but the Northern Echo newspaper reported recently that it was based on the wrong man.
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Synthetic rubber – 1839
Natural rubber proved popular when products first went on sale in the 1830s, but mania for the waterproof Brazilian gum rapidly evaporated. People hated its fatal flaw – it turned rock-solid in the cold, and melted and stank in the heat. Yet continued experiments by one American, Charles Goodyear, and a stroke of luck would turn it into a staple of modern life, used everywhere from tyres to shoes.
Synthetic rubber – 1839
The story goes that Goodyear, from Philadelphia, was in the middle of showing off the smoothness of his new rubber product when he made a much bigger breakthrough. He reportedly dropped the rubber by accident while waving it in the air, and it landed on a stove.
The resulting substance miraculously did not melt, and rubber as we know it was born. Goodyear’s limited business skills saw him die in huge debt, but his legacy was honoured in the US tyre firm which adopted his name.
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Potato chips/crisps – 1853
The inventor of potato chips never wanted them to be a hit. American chef George Crum had prepared French fries for a customer at the New York restaurant at which he worked in the 1850s. The guest kept complaining they were not crispy enough – so Crum sought subtle revenge by slicing them into implausibly thin shreds, frying them excessively and sending them back to the table.
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Potato chips/crisps – 1853
Crum was stunned to discover that not only did the customer love the frazzled potatoes, but other guests also began asking for them. The chef embraced the craze, setting up his own restaurant with potato chips on every table. Companies began selling them in bags only much later in the 1920s, but they rapidly became the phenomenally popular snack they are today.
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Synthetic dyes – 1856
Englishman William Henry Perkin was just 18 when he invented the world’s first synthetic dye, although he was actually trying to make the medicine quinine. The budding scientist noticed the brown sludge he had created turned a remarkable purple when he cleaned it out of a beaker with alcohol after one of his home experiments. He later tested the mixture on silk, and was so impressed by the dye he decided to start selling it.
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Synthetic dyes – 1856
The mauve dye Perkin had chanced on was much more effective and cheap to produce than natural dyes. He wisely patented his product and set up a factory to manufacture it in bulk, and before long it had stormed the fashion world. Other companies and an unprecedented variety of colours followed, turning synthetic dyes into big business and earning Perkin a knighthood from the Queen.
Coca-Cola – 1885
American chemist Dr John Pemberton initially intended his French Wine Cola as a cure for headaches. The temperance movement of the 1880s in his native Atlanta forced him to reluctantly tweak the recipe of the wine and coca syrup, however, removing the banned alcohol. The substance now had to be diluted, but when it was first tested with soda water Pemberton realised he was onto a winner.
Coca-Cola – 1885
Coca-Cola says the chemist’s bookkeeper and business partner Frank Robinson came up with the name of the drink, as well as its distinctive logo. Dr Pemberton died just two years after making his invention, but the product eventually became the world’s best-selling fizzy drink. More than a century later, the company sells almost two billion Cokes a year.
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X-rays – 1895
X-rays were uncovered by chance in 1895, when German physicist Wilhelm Roentgen was studying the effect of electric currents on gases. As he experimented with an electron-discharge tube, he noticed a glow coming from a fluorescent screen he happened to have nearby. Strangely, he found no material could block out the glow and dug out a sheet of film to observe its impact. The sheet was imprinted with an image of his hand behind it – the world’s first X-ray.
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X-rays – 1895
Dr Roentgen took this image of his wife’s hand – wedding ring included – not long afterwards. “I have seen my death,” she reportedly said on seeing it, and he excitedly sent it to colleagues. The medical world quickly realised the enormous potential of the X-ray, and the first hospital radiology department opened within a year.
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Corn flakes – 1898
American brothers John and Will Kellogg were unlikely cereal entrepreneurs. John worked at a Michigan sanitarium run by Seventh-Day Adventists in the 1890s, and the pair were trying to create a more easily digestible form of bread for his patients. They overboiled their wheat by mistake and, rather than dough, it formed into dry flakes. It was surprisingly tasty, and they decided to go ahead and feed it to patients anyway.
Corn flakes – 1898
Patients enjoyed the snack so much that the pair kept trying to finesse the recipe, making the first corn flakes from toasted maize in 1898. John took some persuading to go into business, but eight years later the brothers launched what was then called the Battle Creek Toasted Corn Flake Company. Fast-forward over a century, and Kellogg’s says it now sells corn flakes in more than 180 countries worldwide.
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Plastic – 1907
Belgian chemist Leo Baekeland was trying to create a better type of resin, used in adhesives and coatings, when he ended up inventing plastic as we know it. His mix of chemicals heated in a giant cooker failed to take off as a resin, but Baekeland saw wider potential in the malleable substance. He called his product Bakelite, and in the early 20th century it became a vital component in radios and cars.
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Plastic – 1907
Baekeland called his plastic “the material of 1,000 uses”, but it ended up having far more than that. Bakelite and other plastics that followed went global, transforming how countless products and tools that shape our lives are made. Fears of devastating consequences for the environment mean not everyone welcomes the plastic boom, however.
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Penicillin – 1928
Scottish scientist Alexander Fleming made one of the most famous accidental discoveries of all time when he developed penicillin in 1928. When he returned home after a holiday, he noticed mould had somehow contaminated a Petri dish of the staphylococcus bacterium he had been studying. The mould culture had miraculously created a germ-free circle around itself, stopping the bacterium’s growth.
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Penicillin – 1928
Fleming realised the substance’s potential, but it was over a decade before Oxford University scientists Howard Florey and Ernst Chain turned it into a safe and usable wonder drug. Developed during the Second World War, penicillin could not come soon enough. It swiftly began saving countless lives, preventing wounded soldiers and civilians from developing potentially fatal infections.
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Microwave – 1945
US physicist Percy Spencer was a leading expert in radar use in the 1940s, helping to improve a technology vital to the Allies’ efforts to win the Second World War. One day, while experimenting with a radar device, he was amazed to find the chocolate bar in his pocket had melted. By 1947 he and his employers, Raytheon, had produced the first microwave, a giant machine like the one pictured.
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Microwave – 1945
Maine-born Spencer was an unlikely inventor. Having left school in his early teens, he taught himself everything he knew about science.
Restaurants, airlines and other companies quickly embraced the technology he had pioneered. By the 1970s, the now-smaller microwave had made its way into millions of homes.
Velcro – 1955
A walk with his dog set Swiss engineer George de Mestral on his journey to inventing Velcro in the 1950s. Annoyed but curious about the way plants stuck to his dog’s fur, he examined both under a microscope. He realised the plants contained thousands of tiny hooks that nestled in tiny hoops in the fur. The creative inventor then began trying to make hooks and hoops of his own from fabric to bond things together, and Velcro was born.
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