Prolific Inventor Stan Ovshinsky Dead at 89
Stanford Ovshinsky the self-taught physicist who founded Energy Conversion Devices Inc. in 1960 and amassed some 1,200 patents worldwide died of cancer this week at age 89.
Stanford Ovshinsky the self-taught physicist who founded Energy Conversion Devices Inc. in 1960 and amassed some 1,200 patents worldwide died of cancer this week at age 89.
The son of a metal scrap collector in Akron, Ohio, Ovshinsky was regarded by his scientific associates as a genius. He pioneered the development of thin-film semiconductors a feat many scientists had considered impossible.
Ovshinsky's early ideas were widely panned by the scientific community until David Adler, a renowned physicist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, endorsed his work. Ovshinsky's lab in Detroit became a magnet for researchers, including such notables as Linus Pauling and Edward Teller.
Time magazine described Ovshinsky in 1999 as a "hero for the planet." Seven years later The Economist magazine called him "the Edison of our age."
Ovshinsky developed nickel-metal hydride batteries, invented thin-film solar panels and earned patents for technologies used in everything from rewritable CDs and DVDs to flat-screen displays and fuel cells. His patents made him wealthy, and he was a lifelong champion of social causes, including bettering the lives of minorities and the poor.
Ovshinsky was a master at attracting funding for research, but his companies were notorious for their chronic unprofitability.
His second wife, Iris, who co-founded ECD and was a vice president and director of the company, died in 2006 at age 79. Ovshinsky was pushed into retirement from ECD in 2007. But he launched a new company, Ovshinsky Innovation LLC, a year later to continue pursuing his interest in energy sciences.
The family plans a private burial service on Sunday in Akron. An online memorial is posted HERE.