The
DuPont Experimental Station is the largest
research and development facility of
E. I. du Pont de Nemours and
Company.
Located on the banks of the Brandywine Creek in
Wilmington,
Delaware
, it is home to some of the most important
discoveries of the modern chemical industry.
Overview
The Experimental Station marked its 100th anniversary in 2003.
It was
founded as an effort to move the DuPont Company from gunpowder and explosives
into the new age of chemistry.[1] The site overlooks the
original powder mills upon which the company was founded - now
Hagley Museum
and Library
, a nonprofit educational institution documenting
the history of DuPont business and technology. The
Experimental Station is east from Hagley Museum and west-southwest
from the
Alfred
I. duPont Hospital for Children.
As one of the first industrial research laboratories in the United
States, the campus-style Experimental Station in Wilmington,
Delaware, serves as the primary research and development facility
for DuPont. It is home to DuPont's
Central Research and most other business
units of DuPont are also represented on site. The Experimental
Station is the birthplace of many of the innovative materials and
products developed by DuPont since 1903, including:
Today nearly 2,000 scientists and researchers - including roughly
600 with
Ph.D.s - pursue new opportunities for
a broad range of global markets including
agriculture and
nutrition,
electronics,
safety and protection,
coatings and
performance materials. There are over 50 buildings encompassing
250,000 square meters of research space. This centralized facility
allows collaborations to enhance scientific discovery. More recent
successes include Suva
refrigerants,
the BAX
food safety systems and
Sorona polyester.

DuPont scientist Armando Byrne
discusses potential new directions in biofuels research with
President George W.
Bush as DuPont's then CEO, Chad Holliday, looks on.
Research and development now under way includes
nanotechnology, emerging
video display technologies,
fuel cells, and
biomaterials produced from
renewable resources such as
corn. These developments could lead to foods that help
prevent diseases and brittle bones, "smart" materials that can
adjust performance on their own, microorganisms that produce
biodegradable products and innovative
materials for personal protection.
On the morning of January 24, 2007, President
George W. Bush
became the first president to visit the Experimental Station. He
saw examples of how DuPont is putting science to work to provide
products for agricultural energy crops, feedstock processing and
advanced
biofuels such as
ethanol and bio-
butanol. He
also viewed other
alternative
energy sources and technologies dealing with
energy conservation. These are all part
of DuPont’s sustainable growth mission.
References
External links