Francis P. Bundy
American physicist (1910–2008) / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Francis Pettit Bundy (September 1, 1910, Columbus, Ohio – February 23, 2008, Lebanon, Ohio)[1] was an American physicist, known as a member of General Electric's team of researchers that in December 1954 created diamond chips by applying ultra high pressure (65 kbar)[2] to graphite with iron sulfide as a catalyst.[3]