Shanghai Daily

Work on lithium-ion batteries wins Nobel

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THREE researcher­s won the Nobel Chemistry Prize yesterday for the developmen­t of lithium-ion batteries, paving the way for smartphone­s and a fossil fuel-free society.

John Goodenough of the United States — at 97 the oldest person to be awarded a Nobel prize — Britain’s Stanley Whittingha­m, and Japan’s Akira Yoshino will share the nine million Swedish kronor (US$$914,000) prize equally, the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences said.

“This lightweigh­t, rechargeab­le and powerful battery is now used in everything from mobile phones to laptops and electric vehicles... (and) can also store significan­t amounts of energy from solar and wind power, making possible a fossil fuel-free society,” the jury said.

“Lithium batteries have revolution­ized our lives since they first entered the market in 1991,” it said, adding they were “of the greatest benefit to humankind.”

Seeking an alternativ­e source of power during the oil crisis of the 1970s, Whittingha­m discovered a way to harness the potential energy in lithium, a metal so light it floats on water.

He constructe­d a battery partly made of lithium that utilized the element’s natural tendency to shed electrons, thereby transferri­ng energy.

However, the battery was too unstable to be used.

Goodenough built on Whittingha­m’s prototype, substituti­ng a different metal compound and doubling the potential energy of the battery to four volts.

This paved the way for far more powerful and durable batteries in the future.

In 1985, Yoshino instead used a carbonbase­d material that stores lithium ions, finally rendering the battery commercial­ly viable.

The culminatio­n of the trio’s research resulted in the most powerful, lightweigh­t and rechargeab­le battery ever seen.

When asked what type of researcher he is, Yoshino told a Tokyo press conference that a good scientist needed two qualities.

“One thing is that you have to have a flexible brain. Flexibilit­y. The other is tenacity. You stay persistent and never give up,” he said.

Yoshino, 71, works at the Asahi Kasei Corporatio­n in Tokyo and is a professor at Meijo University in Nagoya, Japan, while Goodenough holds the Cockrell Chair in Engineerin­g at the University of Texas at Austin.

Whittingha­m, 77, is a professor at the Binghamton University, State University of New York.

The trio will receive the prize from King Carl XVI Gustaf at a formal ceremony in Stockholm on December 10, the anniversar­y of the 1896 death of scientist Alfred Nobel who created the prizes in his last will and testament.

(AFP)

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