Whittingham bio

Image: During his State of the University Address, held Oct. 17 on campus, Binghamton University President Harvey Stenger holds up newspaper articles about Nobel Prize winner M. Stanley Whittingham, a distinguished professor at Binghamton.
During his State of the University Address, held Oct. 17 on campus, Binghamton University President Harvey Stenger holds up newspaper articles about Nobel Prize winner M. Stanley Whittingham, a distinguished professor at Binghamton.

M. Stanley Whittingham is a distinguished professor of chemistry and of materials science — the highest system honors conferred upon SUNY faculty. 

Whittingham came to Binghamton University in 1988, after 16 years at Exxon Research and Engineering Co. 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.

With more than 200 publications in some of the leading scholarly journals and 16 patents, Whittingham has earned a national and international reputation as a prolific scientist.

His research in the area of synthesis and characterization of novel transition metal oxides for energy storage and conversion, separations or as sensors has been continuously supported since his arrival in Binghamton with over $7 million in federal research grants from the National Science Foundation and the Department of Energy.

At Binghamton, Whittingham has also helped to establish the Materials Science and Engineering Program, bringing his creativity and innovation to the University’s graduate curriculum as well as to its laboratories.

Since joining the faculty at Binghamton, Whittingham has sustained his groundbreaking research. Working a great deal with ambient temperature, he and his research group emphasize novel approaches to synthesis which often allow structures to be formed that are unstable under the high temperatures normally used for preparing oxides.

In 2002, he was honored with the Battery Research Award of the Electrochemical Society for his many contributions to “Intercalation Chemistry and Battery Materials,” and two years later he was elected a Fellow of the Electrochemical Society.

He has also participated in, and held leadership positions in, the American Chemical Society, the American Physical Society, the Electrochemical Society and the Materials Research Society; served on the editorial boards of several journals including Chemistry of Materials and the Materials Research Bulletin. He was also the founder and principal editor of the journal Solid State Ionics — one of the two major journals in the field.

Whittingham earned his bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral degrees from Oxford University, United Kingdom, before coming to the United States as a post-doctoral fellow at Stanford University.