1600 BCE |
Mesoamericans used natural rubber for balls and figurines |
1000 BCE |
First written evidence of shellac |
Middle Ages |
Europeans used treated cow horns as translucent material for windows. In Japan and China, ox horns are used for the same purpose, as well as for shades on oil lamps |
1284 |
First recorded mention of The Horners Company of London, with horn and tortoiseshell as the predominant early natural plastic |
1823 |
Macintosh uses rubber gum to waterproof cotton and the ‘mac’ is born |
1839 |
Eduard Simon, a German apothecary, discovers polystyrene |
1844 |
Thomas Hancock patents the vulcanization of rubber in Britain, immediately followed by Charles Goodyear in United States |
1845 |
Bewley designs an extruder for gutta percha – a rubber elastomer from the tree of the same name |
1850 |
First submarine telegraph cable in gutta percha is laid between Dover and Calais |
1856 |
Parkesine, the first member of the Celluloid class of compounds and considered the first man-made plastic, is created by Alexander Parkes |
1862 |
Display of Parkesine, predecessor of celluloid (cellulose nitrate), at the 1862 Great International Exhibition in London |
1869 |
John Wesley Hyatt discovers a method to simplify the production of celluloid, making industrial production possible |
1872 |
PVC was accidentally synthesized in 1872 by German chemist Eugen Baumann |
1872 |
Hyatt brothers patented the first plastics injection moulding machine |
1880 |
Fashion for long hair leads to cellulose nitrate replacing horn as the preferred material for combs |
1885 |
George Eastman Kodak patents machine for producing continuous photographic film based on cellulose nitrate |
1889 |
Eastman Kodak successfully filed a patent for the celluloid film |
1890s |
Galalith, a plastic derived from casein (milk protein) is developed by Wilhelm Krische and Adolph Spitteler |
1890s |
Auguste Trillat discovered the means to make casein insoluble by immersing it in formaldehyde, producing a material marketed as galalith |
1890 |
Thermoforming is introduced, and used to make babies rattles from cellulose nitrate |
1892 |
Viscose silk (rayon) developed by Cross and Bevan (Chardonnet Silk) |
1894 |
Shellac phonograph records are developed and soon become an industry standard |
1898 |
Polyethylene is first synthesised by the German chemist Hans von Pechmann while investigating diazomethane |
1898 |
Beginning of mass production of rpm gramophone records from shellac |
1899 |
Krische and Spittler in Germany are awarded a patent for Casein Plastic made from milk. Artefacts are introduced at the Plastics Universal Exhibition in 1900 |
1907 |
Bakelite, the first fully synthetic thermoset, was reported by Leo Baekeland using phenol and formaldehyde |
1909 |
Casein plastics, derived from milk, are developed by Erinoid |
1910 |
Stockings made of viscose begin to be manufactured in Germany |
1912 |
After over 10 years of research, Jacques E. Brandenberger develops a method for producing cellophane and secures a patent |
1915 |
Queen Mary sees casein products at the British Industries Fair and orders several pieces of jewellery made from it |
1916 |
Rolls Royce begins to use phenol formaldehyde in its car interiors - and boasts about it! |
1919 |
Eichengrün produces the first cellulose acetate moulding powder |
1921 |
Beginning of rapid growth of phenolic mouldings especially for electrical insulation, with addition of phenolic laminates in 1930 |
1922 |
Staudinger publishes his work that recognises that plastics are composed of long chain molecules – leading to Nobel prize in 1935 |
1924 |
Rossiter at British Cyanide develops urea thiourea formaldehyde resins, subsequently commercialised as the first water white transparent thermosetting moulding powder |
1926 |
Harrods hosts its first display of new coloured thermosetting plastic tableware produced by Brookes and Adams, The Streetly Manufacturing Company and Thomas De La Rue and Co |
1926 |
Eckert and Ziegler patent the first commercial modern plastics injection moulding machine |
1926 |
Waldo Semon and the B.F. Goodrich Company developed a method to plasticise PVC by blending it with various additives. |
1929 |
Bakelite Ltd receives its largest ever order for phenolic moulding powder for the casing of the Siemens telephone |
1930s |
Polystyrene is first produced by BASF (Baden Aniline and Soda Factory) |
1930 |
Neoprene is produced for the first time at DuPont |
1930 |
‘Scotch’ tape, the first transparent sticky tape is invented in the USA by 3M Company |
1931 |
RCA Victor introduce their vinyl-based Victrolac compound for records. Vinyl records have twice the groove density of shellac records with improved sound quality |
1932 |
Screw per-plasticisation in injection moulding patented |
1933 |
British Plastics Federation is founded |
1933 |
The first industrially practical polyethylene synthesis is discovered by Eric Fawcett and Reginald Gibson at the Imperial Chemical Industries (ICI) works in Northwich, England |
1935 |
Nylon is invented and patented by DuPont |
1935 |
Troester in Germany produces the first extruder designed for thermoplastics. |
1935 |
Carothers and DuPont patent nylon |
1936 |
First production of aircraft canopies made from ‘Perspex’. |
1937 |
Columbo and Pasquetti in Italy produce first twin screw extruder machine |
1937 |
First commercial production of polystyrene by IG Farben, Germany |
1938 |
Full scale production of nylon-6 fibre begins in United States |
1938 |
Nylon is first used for bristles in toothbrushes. It features at the 1939 world’s fair and is famously used in stockings in 1940 |
1938 |
Polytetrafluoroethylene (commonly known as Teflon), discovered by Roy Plunkett at DuPont. |
1939 |
First commercial production of polyethylene in the UK by ICI |
1939 |
WWII begins – strategic stockpiles, plastics are used in war |
1940s |
Use of polyethylene in radar |
1940 |
First production of PVC in UK |
1940 |
DuPont introduces polyacrylonitrile (PAN), an early engineering product |
1941 |
Polyethylene terephthalate (PET) is discovered at the Calico Printers' Association in Britain. Expanded polystyrene is first produced |
1942 |
‘Super Glue’ (methyl cyanoacrylate) first discovered by Dr Harry Coover, Eastman Kodak |
1943 |
First pilot plant for polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE); to be marketed under trademark ‘Teflon’ |
1945 |
The production of LDPE for the ‘Sqezy’ bottle by Monsanto caused a rapid expansion of the industry, with containers produced to replace glass bottles for shampoos and liquid soaps. |
1947 |
Formica melamine faced decorative laminates are introduced into the UK |
1948 |
Acrylonitrile-butadiene-styrene (ABS) produced |
1948 |
George de Mestral invents Velcro, patented in 1955 |
1948 |
Introduction of 12” long playing records made from polyvinyl chloride (PVC) |
1949 |
First Airfix self-assembly model, initially made of cellulose acetate and later polystyrene |
1949 |
High impact polystyrene is introduced as a commercial plastic |
1949 |
Launch in US of Tupperware, made from low-density polyethylene (LDPE) |
1949 |
‘Lycra’ based on polyurethane is invented by DuPont |
1950s |
The polyethylene bag makes its first appearance |
1950s |
Introduction of acrylonitrile-butadiene-styrene (ABS) copolymers |
1950 |
ICI opens a new factory at Redcar to produce Terylene |
1950 |
DuPont begins the manufacture of polyester |
1951 |
J. Paul Hogan and Robert L. Banks from Phillips polymerized propylene for the first time to produce polypropylene (PP) |
1951 |
Festival of Britain |
1953 |
Commercialisation of polyester fibres introduces the concept of ‘drip dry’ and ‘non-iron’ |
1953 |
Polycarbonate is independently developed by Hermann Schnell at Bayer and Daniel Fox at General Electric |
1954 |
Expanded polystyrene, used for building insulation, packaging, and cups was invented by Dow Chemical. |
1955 |
First production of high-density polyethylene in the UK |
1956 |
Reliant Regal 111, the first commercially successful all glass-reinforced-plastic bodied car goes on sale |
1956 |
Eero Saarinen’s Tulip Chair launched, consisting of seat made of glass-fibre-reinforced plastic. |
1956 |
DuPont files patents for the first acetals (POM) |
1957 |
The hoop is reinvented as the Hula Hoop by Knerr & Medlin, Wham-O Toy Company |
1957 |
Italian firm Montecatini begin large-scale commercial production of isotactic polypropylene using Ziegler-Natta catalysts |
1958 |
First production of polycarbonates (Bayer and General Electric) |
1958 |
Lego patents its stud and block coupling system and produces toys of cellulose acetate, later acrylonitrile butadiene styrene (ABS) polymer. |
1959 |
Barbie Doll is unveiled by Mattel at the American International Toy Fair |
1960s |
High-density polyethylene bottles introduced and soon replace glass bottles in most applications. Water based acrylic paints are also introduced |
1960 |
Ethylene-vinyl acetate co-polymers launched by DuPont |
1965 |
Kevlar developed at DuPont by Stephanie Kwolek |
1962 |
DuPont launches polyimide films and varnishes |
1962 |
Silicone gel breast implants pioneered successfully |
1966 |
Blow moulding of fuel tanks introduced |
1967 |
Polyvinyl chloride (PVC) ‘Blow’ chair designed by Scolari, De Pas and Lomazzifor manufactured by Zanotta |
1969 |
Neil Armstrong plants a nylon flag on the moon |
1970 |
First Yellow HDPE (high density polyethylene) pressure pipes for gas are introduced into UK by Wavin/British Gas |
1973 |
Polyethylene terephthalate (PET) beverage bottles introduced |
1976 |
Plastics, in its great variety of forms, becomes the most used type of material in the world |
1977 |
Polyaryletheretherketone (PEEK) is first prepared by ICI |
1979 |
Introduction of the first commercial mobile/ portable phones |
1979 |
First PVC-U double-glazed windows installed |
1980s |
Polyester film stock replaces cellulose acetate for photographic film and computer tapes. |
1980 |
First production of linear low-density polyethylene (LDPE) |
1980 |
First Blue HDPE pressure pipes for potable water introduced into UK |
1982 |
First artificial heart made mainly of polyurethane is introduced and implanted in a human |
1983 |
The slim plastic Swatch watch is introduced, made of 51 mainly plastic components |
1983 |
ICI and Bayer launch PEEK, PPS (polyphenylene sulphide), and PES (polyether sulphone) |
1987 |
BASF in Germany produces a polyacetylene that has twice the electrical conductivity of copper |
1988 |
Introduction of triangular recycling symbols relating to plastics |
1988 |
First polymer bank notes issued in Australia |
1989 |
First light-emitting polymers (poly-ethyne) discovered in Cambridge |
1989 |
The Gravimetric Batch Blender is invented by Steve Maguire revolutionising the industry and bringing affordable gravimetric blending to processors |
1990 |
ICI launches Biopol, the first commercially available biodegradable plastic |
1991 |
Dyson’s vacuum cleaner launched in Japan |
1994 |
Smart car with lightweight flexible integrally coloured polycarbonate panels introduced |
1998 |
Free standing Zanussi Oz fridge, with insulation and outer skins made in one process from polyurethane foam introduced |
2000s |
Nanotechnology applied to polymer and composite applications |
2000 |
First commercial metallocene catalysed polyolefins introduced |
2001 |
iPod dreamed up by Tony Fadell, an independent inventor, developed by Apple Computers |
2005 |
NASA explores the advantages of a polyethylene-based material RFX1, as the material for the spaceship that will send man to Mars |
2005 |
Polycond project established to look at the potential of conductive polymers |
2008 |
Airbus 380, comprising 22% carbon-fibre reinforced plastics flies into Heathrow |
2009 |
Boeing 787, nicknamed 'Boeing's Plastic Dream' comes into service, its skin is made up of 100% Plastic composites with plastic making up 50% of all materials in the plane |