Dr. Thomas Owusu Mensah, a Ghanaian-American chemical engineer who made significant contributions to the development of fiber optic technology, has died at the age of 74.
He died on March 27, 2024, after a short illness at the Catholic Hope Exchange Hospital in Kumasi, in Ghana’s Ashanti Region. Family sources say the funeral arrangements will be announced in due course.
Dr. Mensah’s work is credited with making fiber optics a more practical and cost-effective solution for data transmission. During his time at Corning Glass Works, he revolutionised the manufacturing process for fiber optic cables.
Previously limited by speed and cost, Dr. Mensah’s innovations increased production speed to 20 meters per second by 1985, and further advancements followed. This breakthrough significantly reduced the cost of fiber optics, making them competitive with traditional copper cables.
His contributions extended beyond speed; Dr. Mensah’s advancements in manufacturing processes also made fiber optic cables more affordable to produce, paving the way for their widespread adoption in modern communication systems.
Dr. Mensah’s achievements were widely recognised. He received accolades from prestigious institutions including the National Academy of Inventors (NAI), the U.S. National Academy of Engineering (NAE), and Ghana’s National Order of the Volta.
Sympathizers have taken to social media to eulogize the late inventor with some Diasporians describing saying, ”Ghana, Africa and the world has, indeed, lost a gem”.
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