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World

Pioneers of lithium-ion battery win Nobel Chemistry Prize

Pia Ohlin - Agence France-Presse

STOCKHOLM, Sweden — Three researchers won the Nobel Chemistry Prize on Wednesday 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 (about $914,000 or 833,000 euros) 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 revolutionised our lives since they first entered the market in 1991," and were "of the greatest benefit to humankind".

Over two-thirds of the world's population own a mobile device, nearly all of which are powered by rechargeable lithium-ion batteries, Paul Coxon of the University of Cambridge's Department of Materials Science and Metallurgy told AFP.

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 utilised 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 carbon-based 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.

Good scientists 'stay persistent' 

"This is such a wonderful thing, and I am very surprised," Yoshino told reporters in Tokyo.

He said he had only got a cell phone in recent years.

"I have long felt a bit of rejection towards mobile phones, so I have never had one until recently.

"I know the lithium-ion battery really benefited mobile phones," he said, adding he did "not really" feel that he had helped make a product that benefited his life.

For Yoshino, 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."

Goodenough, who was in London when he received the news, said he, like Yoshino, didn't expect to be honoured, but expressed more pride in the worldwide impact of his work. 

"I'm extremely happy that my discovery has been able to help communication through the world. We need to build relationships, not wars. I am happy if people use this for good, not evil," he told reporters during a press conference. 

Whittingham, 77, said he was "overcome with gratitude at receiving this award". His research "has helped advance how we store and use energy at a foundational level, and it is my hope that this recognition will help to shine a much-needed light on the (US) nation's energy future," he said on the website of Binghamton University in New York where he is a professor.

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.

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.

Last year, the honour went to US scientists Frances Arnold and George Smith and British researcher Gregory Winter for developing enzymes used for greener and safer chemistry and antibody drugs with fewer side effects.

Arnold was just the fifth woman to clinch chemistry's most prestigious honour since Marie Curie in 1911.

This year's Nobel season kicked off on Monday with the Medicine Prize, followed by the Physics Prize on Tuesday.

Peace Prize on Friday 

The Literature Prize will follow on Thursday, with two laureates to be crowned after a sexual harassment scandal forced the Swedish Academy to postpone the 2018 award, for the first time in 70 years.

Names creating a buzz ahead of this year's literature prize include Canadian poet Anne Carson, Kenyan writer Ngugi Wa Thiong'o, Romanian poet and novelist Mircea Cartarescu and Polish writer and activist Olga Tokarczuk.

On Friday the action moves to Norway where the Peace Prize is awarded, with bookies predicting a win for Swedish teen climate activist Greta Thunberg.

The Economics Prize will wrap up the Nobel prize season on October 14.

AKIRA YOSHINO

LITHIUM-ION BATTERIES

NOBEL CHEMISTRY PRIZE

NOBEL PRIZE

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