Willard Harrison Bennett (born June 13, 1903, Findlay, Ohio, U.S.—died September 28, 1987) was an American physicist who discovered (1934) the pinch effect, an electromagnetic process that may offer a way to magnetically confine a plasma at temperatures high enough for controlled nuclear fusion reactions to occur.
Bennett attended the University of Wisconsin (M.Sc., 1926) and Ohio State University in Columbus (Ph.D., 1928). In 1930 he joined the faculty of Ohio State but left in 1938 to become director of research of the Electronic Research Corporation. As a U.S. Army officer (1941–45), he worked on aircraft equipment development, and he served as chief (1946–50) of the physical electronics section of the National Bureau of Standards in Washington, D.C. He was a consultant (1951–61) for the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory and held the Burlington professorship (1961–76) of physics at North Carolina State University in Raleigh.
In addition to his discovery of the pinch effect, Bennett proposed (1936) the tandem Van de Graaff accelerator, which later became widely used in nuclear research, and he invented a radio-frequency mass spectrometer used in space research. Bennett received more than 65 patents during his career.