Here's an article published "tomorrow" (June 13, 2016 local time) in Australia, interviewing co-inventor of polymer
banknotes, David Solomon. -Editor
Professor David Solomon has received the top-tier Companion (AC) in the Queen's Birthday Honours list, but he only has to open his
wallet for proof of his value to science.
The type of plastic banknote he co-invented, first circulated in Australia 1988, has since been exported to 34 countries including
Canada, Chile and Vietnam, and is soon to be released in the UK.
In 2014-15 alone, Note Printing Australia, a subsidiary of the Reserve Bank, delivered 166 million Australian banknotes and 152 million
banknotes to other countries.
But Professor Solomon, 86, an honorary professorial fellow at the University of Melbourne's department of chemical and biomolecular
engineering, is not the big-headed type.
Although he receives no royalties from the notes, he says "that doesn't worry me. I'm not driven by that. I was employed by
CSIRO and it was my job."
Although the banknote is "a great achievement and I don't want to downplay it", he is prouder of his broader breakthrough
of working out how to custom-build plastics by controlling the structure, composition and properties of polymers.
The chemistry is applicable to fields as diverse as cosmetics, computers and paint. He was admitted to the elite Royal Society in 2004
and in 2011 he and Professor Ezio Rizzardo were awarded the Prime Minister's Prize for Science.
Currently, he is working with Professor Greg Qiao, head of the university's polymer group, to develop new paints, car oils, and
biomedical applications such as eye implants.
A Melbourne criminal gang's 1966 forgery of $800,000 worth of $10 bills sparked the then Reserve Bank governor, Herbert
'Nugget' Coombs, to ask senior scientists to design more secure banknotes. Professor Solomon began his work on the "secret
project" at CSIRO in 1967.
He says partly because the RBA was a reluctant commercial exporter and technology leader, it wasn't until 1988 that it released the
first polymer $10 notes, with clear plastic windows and holograms that deterred backyard note printing.
But Professor Solomon has advised the RBA to employ scientists to keep ahead of the forgers."I said, 'It's never going to
be over'. You can't sit still. You've got to get out in front and stay there, and so that's what's happening. They
employ scientists who are coming up with new and improved notes all the time."
He is "absolutely delighted" with the Order of Australia to complement his science honours, and the recognition from wider
society was satisfying.
To read the complete article, see:
Queen's Birthday Honours 2016: Professor David Solomon co-inventor of plastic money gets a gong
(www.illawarramercury.com.au/story/3963463/queens-birthday-honours-2016-professor-david-solomon-co-inventor-of-plastic-money-gets-a-gong/)
Wayne Homren, Editor
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