President's Report Masthead
December 31, 2015

Whittingham named Thomson Reuters Citation Laureate

M. Stanley Whittingham, distinguished professor of chemistry and of materials science, has been named a 2015 Thomson Reuters Citation Laureate – a researcher whose work has achieved quantifiable esteem and impact in the scientific community at a level far beyond the norm. According to Thomson Reuters, this attainment signals that he is “of Nobel” class and likely to earn the Nobel someday.

Whittingham and John B. Goodenough, the Virginia H. Cockrell Centennial Chair in Engineering at the University of Texas, Austin, received the designation from Thomson Reuters for their pioneering research leading to the development of the lithium-ion battery. Together Whittingham and Goodenough are among the three selections made by Thomson Reuters in the Nobel category of chemistry.

Whittingham came to Binghamton University in 1988, after 16 years at Exxon Research and Engineering Company and Schlumberger-Doll Research. In his 30-plus year career, he has been a pioneer in the development of lithium ion batteries and his work has been called foundational by colleagues at all levels. He holds the original patent on the concept of the use of intercalation chemistry in high-power density, highly reversible lithium batteries – work that provided the basis for subsequent discoveries that now power most laptop computers – and his research has been called ‘world-leading.’

He is director of the NorthEast Center for Chemical Energy Storage (NECCES) at Binghamton University that in 2014 was awarded a $12.8 million, four-year grant from the US. Department of Energy to fund Energy Frontier Research Centers to help accelerate scientific breakthroughs needed to build a new 21st-century economy.

Read more