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  1. Akira Yoshino Biographical . I was born in Suita City, Osaka Prefecture, in 1948. My father, Sojiro, was an electrical engineer who worked at a power company. My mother worked at a bank until she married, after which she became a housewife. Suita is located about 10 km north of the center of Osaka City. My home was surrounded by bamboo groves.

  2. Akira Yoshino (吉野 彰, Yoshino Akira, born 30 January 1948) is a Japanese chemist. He is a fellow of Asahi Kasei Corporation and a professor at Meijo University in Nagoya . He created the first safe, production-viable lithium-ion battery , [1] which became used widely in cellular phones and notebook computers .

  3. Akira Yoshino was born in Suita, Japan. After studying technology at Kyoto University, he began working at the Asahi Kasei chemical company in 1972, with which he has been associated throughout his non-academic career. Since 2005 he has headed his own laboratory at Asahi Kasei.

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  5. May 10, 2024 · Yoshino Akira (born January 30, 1948, Suita, Japan) is a Japanese chemist who won the 2019 Nobel Prize for Chemistry for his work in developing batteries lithium -ion . He shared the prize with American physicist John B. Goodenough and British-born American chemist M. Stanley Whittingham.

  6. Brief History and Future of the Lithium-Ion Battery. Akira Yoshino delivered his Nobel Lecture on Sunday 8 December 2019, at the Aula Magna, Stockholm University. He was introduced by Professor Olof Ramström, member of the Nobel Committee for Chemistry. Read the Nobel Lecture. Pdf 1,2 MB.

  7. In 2019, Dr. Akira Yoshino was awarded the Nobel Prize for his work in inventing the world’s first lithium-ion battery. Dr. Yoshino talks about the challenges he overcame in developing lithium-ion batteries and the role that strategic use of patent rights has played in the commercialization of these power packs.

  8. Akira Yoshino was born in Suita City, Osaka Prefecture, in 1948. His fascination with chemistry began early, when his fourth-grade teacher recommended he read The Chemical History of a Candle by Michael Faraday. He entered Kyoto University in 1966 as a student of the Department of Petrochemistry, majoring in quantum organic chemistry, followed ...

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