Herbert Maxwell Strong
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Herbert Maxwell Strong (September 30, 1908,
Wooster, Ohio Wooster ( ) is a city in the U.S. state of Ohio and the county seat of Wayne County. Located in northeastern Ohio, the city lies approximately south-southwest of Cleveland, southwest of Akron and west of Canton. The population was 27,232 at ...
– January 30, 2002,
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) was an American physicist and inventor, known as part of the
General Electric General Electric Company (GE) is an American multinational conglomerate founded in 1892, and incorporated in New York state and headquartered in Boston. The company operated in sectors including healthcare, aviation, power, renewable en ...
(GE) team of researchers who synthesized diamonds in late 1954, as announced by GE in early 1955.


Education and career

Herbert M. Strong graduated in 1930 with a B.S. from the
University of Toledo The University of Toledo (UToledo or UT) is a public research university in Toledo, Ohio. It is the northernmost campus of the University System of Ohio. The university also operates a Health Science campus, which includes the University of ...
. At
Ohio State University The Ohio State University, commonly called Ohio State or OSU, is a public land-grant research university in Columbus, Ohio. A member of the University System of Ohio, it has been ranked by major institutional rankings among the best publ ...
he was a graduate student in physics and graduated in 1931 with an M.S. and in 1936 with a Ph.D. His doctoral adviser was Harold Paul Knauss (1900–1963), who was the author of the 1951 textbook ''Discovering Physics''. Strong was employed in Chicago by the Kendall Company, where he worked on the physics and chemistry of adhesives. In 1946 he became a research associate at the General Electric Research Laboratory in Schenectady, New York, where he worked until he retired in 1973. At GE, he worked on "the hot supersonic exhaust flames from rocket motors on test stands." His next major project was research on heat transfer and the "development of a thin, evacuated, flat-panel thermal insulation for use in refrigerators, freezers, and other cooling devices." Strong is credited with 23 U.S. patents. In 1977 he, along with Francis P. Bundy, H. Tracy Hall, and Robert H. Wentorf Jr., received the International Prize for New Materials, now called the James C. McGroddy Prize for New Materials, for "their outstanding research contributions and inventions which include the first reproducible process for making diamond; the synthesis of cubic boron nitride; and the development of the high pressure processes that are required to produce these materials." In retirement, Strong, with other local physicists, participated in a program sponsored by Schenectady's Museum of Innovation and Science. The program enabled schoolchildren to participate "in simple demonstrations of gravity, optics, magnetism, conservation of momentum, and other basic physical phenomena."


Selected publications

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References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Strong, Herbert Maxwell 1908 births 2002 deaths 20th-century American physicists 21st-century American physicists 20th-century American inventors 21st-century American inventors General Electric people People from Wooster, Ohio Scientists from Ohio University of Toledo alumni Ohio State University alumni