🧁 Saccharin: Science with a Taste of Serendipity
While we’re conducting a patent search on tooth powders, we’re also diving into the history of ingredients. 😉
So here’s a little scientific accident — the kind that sometimes leads to patents 🙂
In 1879, chemist Constantin Fahlberg forgot to wash his hands after a long day in the lab.
At dinner, he noticed his bread tasted unusually sweet.
The next day, he traced it back to a compound he had worked with — benzoic sulfinide.
That’s how saccharin was discovered — the first artificial sweetener in history.
🥄 300–500 times sweeter than sugar, calorie-free, and heat-stable.
💊 Used as a sugar substitute during wartime, today it appears in diet drinks — and even toothpaste.
📚 But the story had a bitter aftertaste:
Fahlberg patented the compound under his own name, without crediting Professor Ira Remsen, in whose lab he worked.
Remsen later wrote:
“Fahlberg is a scoundrel. It is a sweet substance — but it leaves a bitter aftertaste, like his behavior.”
🔬 A moment of carelessness, a dash of chemistry — and a discovery was born.
One that, in the hands of intellectuals, becomes a patent monopoly.