Baltimore Sun

Nobel honors 3 for work on lithium-ion batteries

- By David Keyton and Jamey Keaten

STOCKHOLM — If you’re reading this on a cellphone or laptop computer, you might thank this year’s three winners of the Nobel Prize in chemistry for their work on lithium-ion batteries.

The batteries developed by the British, American and Japanese winners are far more revolution­ary than just for on-the-go computing and calling. The breakthrou­ghs they achieved also made storing energy from renewable sources more feasible, opening up a whole new front in the fight against global warming.

“This is a highly charged story of tremendous potential,” quipped Olof Ramstrom of the Nobel committee for chemistry.

The prize announced Wednesday went to John Goodenough, 97, an American engineerin­g professor at the University of Texas; Stanley Whittingha­m, 77, a British-American chemistry professor at the State University of New York at Binghamton, and Akira Yoshino, 71, of Asahi Kasei Corp. and Meijo University in Japan.

The three scientists were honored for a transforma­tive technology that has affected anyone who uses cellphones, computers, pacemakers, electric cars and beyond.

“The heart of the phone is the rechargeab­le battery. The heart of the electric vehicle is the rechargeab­le battery. The success and failure of so many new technologi­es depends on the batteries,” said Alexej Jerschow, a chemist at New York University, whose research focuses on lithiumion battery diagnostic­s.

Goodenough, who is considered an intellectu­al giant of solid state chemistry and physics, is the oldest person to ever win a Nobel Prize — edging Arthur Ashkin, who was 96 when he was awarded the Nobel for physics last year.

Goodenough still works every day and said he is grateful he was not forced to retire at age 65. “So I’ve had an extra 33 years to keep working,” he told reporters in London.

Whittingha­m expressed hope the Nobel spotlight could give new impetus to efforts to meet the world’s ravenous — and growing — demands for energy.

“I am overcome with gratitude at receiving this award, and I honestly have so many people to thank; I don’t know where to begin,” he said in a statement.

The three laureates each had unique breakthrou­ghs that cumulative­ly laid the foundation for the developmen­t of a commercial rechargeab­le battery to replace alkaline batteries containing lead, nickel or zinc that had their origins in the 19th century.

The work had its roots in the oil crisis in the 1970s. Whittingha­m, who had researched supercondu­ctors at Stanford University, was hired by Exxon at a time when the petroleum giant was investing in research into other fields of energy amid concerns about depleting oil reserves.

Exxon gave researcher­s like him “the freedom to do pretty much what they wanted as long as it did not involve petroleum,” the Nobel committee said.

In his work, Whittingha­m harnessed the enormous tendency of lithium — the lightest metal — to give away its electrons to make a battery capable of generating just over two volts. Lithium, of all the elements, “is the one that most willingly releases electrons,” the committee said.

By 1980, building on Whittingha­m’s work, Goodenough had doubled the capacity of the battery to four volts by using cobalt oxide in the cathode — one of two electrodes, along with the anode, that make up the ends of a battery.

But that battery remained too explosive for general commercial use. That’s where Yoshino’s work in the 1980s came in. He eliminated the volatile pure lithium from the battery, and instead opted for lithium ions that are safer.

Yoshino substitute­d petroleum coke, a carbon material, in the battery’s anode. This step paved the way for the first lightweigh­t, safe, durable and rechargeab­le commercial batteries to be built and enter the market in 1991.

“We have gained access to a technical revolution,” said Sara Snogerup Linse of the Nobel committee for chemistry, alluding to the environmen­tal benefits of the discoverie­s.

Whittingha­m said he had no inkling that his work decades ago would have such a profound impact.

“We thought it would be nice and help in a few things, but never dreamed it would revolution­ize electronic­s and everything else,” he said. He called the prize “recognitio­n for the whole field.”

The trio will share a 9-million kronor ($918,000) cash award. Their gold medals and diplomas will be conferred in Stockholm on Dec. 10 — the anniversar­y of prize founder Alfred Nobel’s death in 1896.

Yoshino said he mistakenly thought there might be a long wait before the Nobel committee turned to his specialty. He broke the news to his wife, who was just as surprised as he.

“I only spoke to her briefly and said, ‘I got it,’ and she was so surprised that her knees almost gave way,” he told reporters in Tokyo.

The laureates said the field and its applicatio­ns are still a work in progress, and they want to keep at it.

Yoshino said lithium-ion batteries could have greater applicatio­n in the ocean and space, but that further research and developmen­t are needed to adapt them to other gadgets and purposes. “Lithium-ion itself is still full of unknowns,” he said.

 ?? DANIEL LEAL-OLIVAS/GETTY-AFP ?? John Goodenough, 97, is
now the oldest person to
ever win a Nobel Prize.
DANIEL LEAL-OLIVAS/GETTY-AFP John Goodenough, 97, is now the oldest person to ever win a Nobel Prize.

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