Whittingham is a key figure in the history of lithium-ion batteries, which are used in everything from mobile phones to electric vehicles. He discovered intercalation electrodes and thoroughly described intercalation reactions in rechargeable batteries in the 1970s.Age84 yearsDec 22, 1941SpouseOverviewSir Michael Stanley Whittingham (born 22 December 1941) is a British-American. He is a professor of chemistry and director of both the Institute for Materials Research and the and Engineerin. Whittingham was born in the Carlton suburb of,, on 22 December 1941. His father was a civil engineer, the first in the family to go to college. His mother Dorothy Mary (née Findley) wa. Whittingham and his boss, Fred Gamble, PhD, conceived the electrode. Exxon manufactured Whittingham's lithium-ion battery in the 1970s, based on a cathode and a lithium-aluminum anode. Th. Stanley is married to Dr. Georgina Whittingham, a professor of Spanish at the. He has two children, Michael Whittingham and Jenniffer Whittingham-Bras.
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