Battery innovator recognized as "Unsung Hero of Science"

October 22, 2009

As a recent recipient of the prestigious Enrico Fermi award from the U.S. Department of Energy, Dr. John Goodenough was recognized by the Houston Chronicle as an “unsung contemporary hero of science.”    Goodenough is a professor of mechanical engineering and electrical engineering at The University of Texas at Austin and lately his focus has been on the potential of a perskovite ceramic to serve as an effective electrode in fuel cells powered by natural gas.

 

Motivated by the 1970s energy crisis, Goodenough grew adventurous enough to work outside the thinking of his scientific contemporaries, and with unassuming genius, magnified energy storage in miniature batteries that remains unrivaled decades later.  The battery cathode material he created midway through his career in the late 1970s provided enough voltage within a tiny package to make possible today’s cell phones, laptops and other portable tools.

 

His creative chemistry proved to be inexpensive, environmentally friendly, safe, sustainable and capable of thousands of charge cycles with a constant output voltage without a loss of capacity.

 

“Our mobile world of communications, computing, entertainment, and increasingly transportation, has been enabled by Goodenough’s fundamental scientific discoveries and technological innovations in energy storage,” said Dr. Gregory Fenves, Cockrell School of Engineering dean.

 

Batteries incorporating his cathode materials are used worldwide for cell phones and other portable wireless devices, power tools, hybrid automobiles and small all-electric vehicles. In addition, they are increasingly used in electrical energy storage for alternative energy, such as wind and solar power. As this technology continues to develop, it can be expected to have an enormous impact on the U.S. economy and the environment by helping to reduce carbon dioxide greenhouse gas emissions.

 

To read the Houston Chronicle interview with Goodenough, visit http://blogs.chron.com/sciguy/archives/2009/10/if_you_love_your_iphone_or_blackberry_thank_this_t.html

 

 

 

 

 

Email this article

 

 

About the Cockrell School of Engineering:

The Cockrell School ranks among the top ten engineering programs in the United States and aspires to move into the top five. With the nation's fourth highest number of faculty members elected to the National Academy of Engineering, the Cockrell School's more than 7,000 students work with many of the world's finest engineering educators and researchers. This environment prepares graduates to become engineering leaders and innovators working for the betterment of society.

Archives