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Otto Wichterle Born October 18, 1913 - August 8, 1998 Cross-Linked Hydrophilic Polymers and Articles Made Therefrom Patent #: 3,220,960
Inducted 2007 Working at his kitchen table, using an old phonograph and an Erector set, Otto Wichterle invented the soft contact lens and the process to manufacture it. In addition to being more comfortable than traditional glass or hard plastic lenses, Wichterle’s lenses were less expensive, required a shorter adjustment period, and could be worn for longer periods of time. Invention Impact
Forced to leave ICT in a political purge, Wichterle continued his work
on hydrogels at home with his wife, a doctor. In 1961, using his
homemade device, he developed a spin-casting process that used
centrifugal force to forge HEMA into soft, pliable lenses. Wichterle and
his wife produced 5,500 lenses within five months. He made little money
from his invention because the Czech government owned the rights to his
process. The government sold those rights to an American optometrist for
$330,000. Born in Prostějov in the Czech Republic, Wichterle earned his Ph.D. from the Institute of Chemical Technology in Prague (ICT). He worked as a professor at ICT in the 1950s creating a material suitable for eye implants known as hydroxy ethyl methacrylate, or HEMA, a polymer gel that absorbed water and was transparent.
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