Thomas Midgley Jr. (
May 18,
1889 -
November 2,
1944), was a clever chemist, but from the viewpoint of
2002 his achievements in preventing
internal combustion[?] engines from
"knocking" by adding
tetra-ethyl lead to the
gasoline they burn, and making
refrigerators safer by synthesizing
chloro-fluorocarbon (CFC) compounds (also called "Freons") and substituting them for the variously poisonous or
explosive substances previously used, look less impressive.
In medicine one of the major uses of CFCs is as safe inert propellants in metered dose inhalers (Asthma Inhalers) for the treatment of asthma. Since the adoption of the Montreal Convention[?], by which major countries agreed to no longer produce CFCs, health services and pharmacological companies have been replacing these inhalers with devices that do not contain CFCs, and training patients in their use.
Thomas Midgley Jr. was a holder of over 170 patents.
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