Goodenough, Nobel laureate who gave the world Li-ion batteries, passes away
- June 27, 2023
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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Goodenough, Nobel laureate who gave the world Li-ion batteries, passes away
Subject : Science and technology
Section: Msc
Context:
- John Bannister Goodenough, the American co-inventor of Lithium-ion batteries and a co-winner of 2019 Nobel prize for Chemistry, has passed away. He was just a month short of turning 101.
About J. B. Goodenough:
- John Goodenough was born to American parents in Jena, Germany.
- After studying mathematics at Yale University, he served in the US Army during the Second World War as a meteorologist.
- He then studied at the University of Chicago and received a doctorate in physics in 1952. He subsequently worked at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Oxford University in the UK.
- He had been a professor at the University of Texas at Austin.
- In 2008, Goodenough wrote his autobiography, Witness to Grace, which he called “my personal history”. The book touches upon science and spirituality.
Contribution of J. B. Goodenough:
- British-American scientist Stan Whittingham, who shared the Nobel prize with Goodenough, was the first to reveal that lithium can be stored within sheets of titanium sulphide.
- Goodenough perfected it with a cobalt-based cathode to create a product that today touches nearly everyone’s life.
- Goodenough also played a significant role in the development of Random Access Memory (RAM) for computers.
About Li-ion Batteries:
- A lithium-ion battery or Li-ion battery is a type of rechargeable battery.
- Li-ion batteries use an intercalated (Intercalation is the reversible inclusion or insertion of a molecule into materials with layered structures) lithium compound as one electrode material, compared to the metallic lithium used in a non-rechargeable lithium battery.
- The battery consists of an electrolyte, which allows for ionic movement, and the two electrodes are the constituent components of a lithium-ion battery cell.
- Lithium ions move from the negative electrode to the positive electrode during discharge and back when charging.
Lithium-ion Battery Applications:
- Electronic gadgets, Telecommunication, Aerospace, Industrial applications.
- Lithium-ion battery technology has made it the favourite power source for electric and hybrid electric vehicles.
Disadvantages of Li-ion Batteries:
- Long charging times.
- Safety issues as instances of batteries catching fires have been there.
- Expensive to manufacture.
- While the Li-ion batteries are seen as sufficiently efficient for applications such as phones and laptops, in the case of EVs, these cells still lack the range that would make them a viable alternative to internal combustion engines.