Description
Rodney D. Bagley, PhD, is an engineer and co-inventor of the catalytic converter.
Rodney Bagley was born in Ogden, Utah, on 2 October 1934. He earned a B.S. in geological engineering in 1960, and a PhD in ceramic engineering in 1964, both from the University of Utah. He worked for Corning Incorporated from 1963 until his retirement in 1994, researching unique ceramic materials. Bagley is a Corning Research fellow, an American Ceramic Society fellow, and recipient of the Geijsbeck Award and the International Ceramics Prize. He was inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame in 2002.
The Clean Air Act set new standards for automotive emissions. Bagley, as part of a Corning team that also included Irwin Lachman and geologist Ronald Lewis, invented the core, or substrate, used in modern catalytic converters. They developed the extrusion die along with a process that made a thin-walled, honeycomb cellular ceramic substrate. Thousands of cellular channels through the structure allowed for a large surface area.
Born
October 2nd, 1934 in Ogden (Age 90)
Last Changes
2022/04/23
New Response (Success): sent an index card ... index card signed and retur..
2022/01/17
New Response (Success): Sent 2 cards, 2 index cards. Kept my cards but sig..
2022/01/17
New Scanned Autograph (TTM/Probably Authentic)