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Rodney Bagley
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Irwin Lachman
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Ronald Lewis
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When the United States passed the Clean Air Act of 1970, three innovators rose to the challenge of reducing automotive pollutants by overcoming many obstacles along the way, and changed the automotive industry forever ­ earning them a place of distinction in the National Inventors Hall of Fame.

While at Corning Glass Works, now Corning Incorporated, Bagley, Lachman and Lewis led the effort to develop the technology for the world’s first significant pollution control for automobiles. In the past, automotive manufactures relied on engine modifications to alter emission, but today, every automotive company in the world relies on cellular ceramic technology to control these pollutants.

The ceramic honeycomb enables 95 percent of the pollutants from the exhaust to be converted into harmless water vapor and carbon dioxide. This ceramic substrate they invented is the result of two fundamental inventions: an advanced ceramic composition and an extrusion die.


Kurzweil Reading Machine
3-Point Seat Belt
Laser Surgery
Implantable Defibrillator
Ceramic Substrate For Catalytic Converters
Aspirin
ENIAC Data Translating Device
Bessemer Steel Process




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