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The Nobel Prize in Chemistry Goes to The Inventor of Rechargeable Lithium Batteries

Number of Kids Watching Online Videos Soars: Survey

The number of young Americans watching online videos every day has more than doubled, according to survey findings released Tuesday. They’re glued to them for nearly an hour a day, twice as long as they were four years ago. And often, the survey found, they’re seeing the videos on services such as YouTube that are supposedly off-limits to children younger than age 13. “It really is the air they breathe,” said Michael Robb, senior director of research for Common Sense Media, the nonprofit organization that issued the report. The group tracks young people’s tech habits and offers guidance for parents. The survey of American youth included the responses of 1,677 young people ages 8 to 18. Among other things, it found that 56 percent of 8- to 12-year-olds and 69…

BINGHAMTON, NEW YORK—In the corner of the hall on the second floor of the Innovative Technologies Complex campus, there is an office decorated with balloons. A modest way to celebrate Dr. M. Stanley Whittingham’s 2019 Chemistry Nobel Prize.

Now 78 years old, Whittingham is still excited about batteries, visiting laboratories, and giving lectures all around the globe.

“So people say, ‘When are you going to retire?’,” said Whittingham. And he will reply, “I like what I’m doing. I’m gonna keep doing it.”

And his wife, Dr. Georgina Whittingham, who is a professor of foreign languages, says the same.

“We keep teaching,” he said. “And my doctor says don’t retire.”

For more than 30 years, Whittingham has been working at Binghamton University in different positions. Currently, he is a Distinguished Professor of Chemistry and Materials Science and Engineering.

It is a place he loves.

“There’s a lot more teamwork here,” he said.

A busy man, even more so since being announced as a key figure in history. What won him the Nobel Prize is that he was the first to develop the lithium battery in the 1970s at Exxon.

British at Heart

Coming from a little town—Lincolnshire, England—his high school teacher got him excited about chemistry.

“Those days, you could make chemicals, blow things up, and things that you are not allowed to do,” he said with a laugh. “So, I got excited about chemistry.”

He then made it to Oxford and finished his B.A., M.A., and Ph.D.

At the end of his Ph.D., unlike many colleagues who went to North America and Canada, he decided to go to Stanford University.

“I want to go somewhere with sunshine,” he said with a laugh. “I am still British at heart.”

After being there for two months, he was asked to take charge of the material labs of the Department of Defense for the next two years.

“Very successful time, I should say. During those two years, something even more important happened,” Whittingham said. “I met my wife at Stanford.”

“We didn’t waste any time, within I think nine months we were married.”

Next-Generation Batteries

After finishing his postdoctoral research in two years, he went to work for Exxon.

“I was hired to work on energy, but not petroleum or chemicals,” he said.

With a keen interest in solar energy and fuel cells, he started researching batteries.

“We wanted to build the next-generation battery,” he explained. “The big interest was electronic vehicles because of the gas crisis in the U.S.”

So they started building batteries in test tubes. At that time, they didn’t have any unique environment, advanced machines, or even theories on what they might discover.

“We knew there was something there. We didn’t know how big it would be.”

Whittingham never thought his invention would change the world.

“Even 15 years ago, the phone, you’d need a whole briefcase to carry it. And I think lithium batteries helped all these little devices.”

In the 1980s, John Goodenough, using the foundation that Whittingham laid, made another breakthrough to even more powerful batteries.

With a physicist’s eyes, Goodenough set out to test something that they thought wouldn’t work, Whittingham said.

Following that, in 1985, Akira Yoshino created the first commercially viable lithium-ion battery.

After decades, these three scientists who changed the world have been recognized with the 2019 Chemistry Nobel Prize.

And it all about perseverance.

“You’re going to make mistakes. Don’t worry about that,” Whittingham said. “Now, if you don’t make mistakes, you won’t make the big breakthrough.”

After working for Exxon, Whittingham realized research and academia was something he always wanted to come back to.

Young at Heart

Whittingham took up a professorship at Binghamton University in the late 80s and continued his research on batteries.

“I really wanted to do research, because lots of academia you get 18-year-olds every year coming in. So it keeps you younger,” he said jokingly.

But in the end, he said what matters is that he does what he likes.

“I think you’re successful if you’re happy with what you’re doing,” he said. Winning a prize certainly helps as well; he added with a laugh.

“It is so motivating that, even at his age, he is still young,” said Anshika Goel, one of his Ph.D. students. “He comes in the lab; he comes to the office every day on time, no matter how much he is traveling.”

“He just replied [to] my e-mail at 3 a.m., he is still working,” said Yicheng Zhang, Whittingham’s Ph.D. student.

Now 30 years later, he is still teaching, and it’s his passion that keeps him young in heart.

This article is from the Internet:The Nobel Prize in Chemistry Goes to The Inventor of Rechargeable Lithium Batteries

Pompeo Says US Must Confront China’s Communist Party

WASHINGTON—U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on Oct. 30 stepped up recent U.S. rhetoric targeting China’s ruling Communist Party, saying Beijing was focused on international domination and needed to be confronted. Pompeo made the remarks even as the Trump administration said it still expected to sign the first phase of a deal to end a trade war with China next month, despite Chile’s withdrawal on Wednesday as the host of an APEC summit where U.S. officials had hoped this would happen. Pompeo said the United States had long cherished its friendship with the Chinese people, adding the Communist government was not the same thing as the people of China. “They are reaching for and using methods that have created challenges for the United States and for the world and we…