October 9, 2019
By Niklas Pollard and Kate Kelland
STOCKHOLM/LONDON (Reuters) – Three scientists have won the 2019 Nobel
Prize for Chemistry for putting power in peoples pockets by developing
rechargeable lithium-ion batteries which made the global information
technology, mobile and fossil-fuel free revolutions possible.
American John Goodenough, at 97, became the oldest winner of a Nobel
prize and shares the 9 million Swedish crown ($906,000 award equally
with Stanley Whittingham from Britain and Akira Yoshino of Japan, the
Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences Nobel Committee said on Wednesday.
“Lithium-ion batteries have revolutionised our lives since they first
entered the market in 1991. They have laid the foundation of a
wireless, fossil fuel-free society, and are of the greatest benefit to
humankind,” the committee said.
With peals of infectious laughter, Goodenough asked reporters at a
hastily called news conference in London to speak up with their
questions so that his “old ears” could hear.
He had not been expecting to win a Nobel prize, he said, but was “very happy” to get it.
“Life is full of surprises,” he said after popping a bottle of champagne in celebration.
After Whittingham developed the first functional lithium battery in
the early 1970s, Goodenough doubled the battery’s potential in the
following decade. Yoshino then eliminated pure lithium from the battery,
making it much safer to use.
Speaking on Japanese TV after hearing of his win, a smiling Yoshino said he was glad to have helped the environment.
“I am happy that the lithium-ion battery won the prize in that
context,” he said, adding that he also hoped it would inspire others: “I
hope this will become an encouragement for young researchers.”
Gregory Offer, an expert in mechanical engineering at Imperial
College London, said the scientists’ work had led to “one of the key
enabling technologies of the 21st century”.
“They have already underpinned the mobile revolution, and are now
essential to help us solve the problem of climate change by electrifying
transport and storing renewable electricity generation,” he said in an
emailed comment.
Paul Coxon, a materials science expert from Britain’s Cambridge
University, said lithium-ion batteries were now “the hidden workhorses
of the mobile era”.
“All three Nobel winners played vital roles in this energy storage
revolution which has now placed power in our pockets,” he said. “It’s a
wonderful example of taking research from the lab. We can literally hold
the result in our hands.”
https://www.oann.com/goodenough-whittingham-and-yoshino-win-2019-nobel-prize-for-chemistry/