Why is it said that Joseph Swan, along with his contemporaries, made a significant change in electric bulb?

          Another person who made significant contributions to the making of the electric bulb is Sir Joseph Wilson Swan.

          Swan was an English chemist. During the 1850s and 1860s, he conducted many experiments on bulbs using carbon filaments. Most of them failed, because the vacuum pumps used in those times were not good, so they couldn’t remove enough air from the lamps. Besides, the lamp deposited a dark layer of soot in its inner surface. This obscured the light.

          In 1878, Swan demonstrated an improved working lamp. It had a better vacuum, and carbonized thread as a filament. The method of processing was such that the bulb avoided early blackening. Soon after the demonstration, Swan was granted a UK patent. After that, light bulbs were installed in homes in England. In 1880, he received a US patent too.

              For his contributions, Swan was knighted in 1904. The same year he also received the prestigious Hughes Medal, instituted by the Royal Society of London.