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Norbert
Rillieux revolutionized the sugar industry by inventing a refining
process, evaporation in multiple effect, that is still in use
today not only for the production of sugar, but also of soap,
gelatin, condensed milk, and glue, as well as for the recovery
of waste liquids in factories and distilleries. Rillieux's system,
in which a series of vacuum pans heat one another in sequence,
had immediate impacts. First, it replaced a dangerous, labor-intensive
process known as the "Jamaican Train," in which slaves
were require to transfer boiling cane juice from one cauldron
to another. The new process also produced a higher-quality product
while using less fuel. These improvements in efficiency catapulted
the U.S. into a leading role in global sugar production and helped
transform sugar from a luxury item to a commonplace one.
Norbert
Rillieux was born in New Orleans, the son of a white engineer
and a freed slave. He studied applied mechanics at the Ecole Centrale
in Paris, but returned to New Orleans in the 1830s. As the status
of free blacks deteriorated in the South, he went back to Paris,
where he lived until his death. In 2002, the American Chemical
Society designated the invention of the multiple-effect evaporator
under vacuum a National Historic Chemical Landmark.

Frederick
Banting
Charles Best
Vannevar Bush
James Collip
Harry Wesley
Coover
Wallace
Coulter
Ray Dolby
Edith Flanigen
Robert Gallo
Ivan Getting
John Gibbon
Lloyd Augustus
Hall
Elias Howe
Charles D.
Kelman
Luc Montagnier
Bernard Oliver
Bradford
Parkinson
Norbert
Rillieux
John Roebling
Claude Shannon
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