Electrochemical Society honors Thackeray
ARGONNE, Ill. (August 3, 2005) – Michael Thackeray of Argonne National Laboratory
is the recipient of the 2005 Research Award of the Battery
Division of the
Electrochemical Society.
Thackeray will receive the award during the Battery Division Luncheon and
Business Meeting in October, when he will present an award address summarizing
his career as a leading researcher in the field of lithium-ion batteries.
The award was established in 1958 to recognize outstanding contributions to
the science and technology of primary and secondary cells and batteries and
fuel cells. The award includes a prize of $1,000.
Thackeray was born and educated in South Africa. He received his Ph.D. in
Chemistry in 1977 from the University of Cape Town and studied as a postdoctoral
student at Oxford University.
From 1973 to 1994, he was employed at the Council
for Scientific and Industrial Research, South Africa, where he initiated
his research on the structural and electrochemical properties of solid electrode
and electrolyte materials for battery systems.
He joined Argonne in 1994
and is currently a senior scientist and a group leader responsible for materials
development in the Battery Department of Argonne's Electrochemical
Technology Program in the Chemical
Engineering Division.
His research has focused on the structural and electrochemical characterization
of silver-iodide-based solid electrolytes and the compositional and structural
design of several transition-metal oxides, particularly manganese oxides, for
rechargeable lithium battery applications. He has also spearheaded the research
of a new class of intermetallic negative electrodes that operate by reversible
lithium insertion/metal displacement reactions.
Thackeray has more than 160 research publications and holds 24 patents, some
of which have led to the international commercialization of battery materials.
Earlier this year, he was recognized on the commemorative wall at Africa's
first internationally accredited science park — The
Innovation Hub, South
Africa — for contributions as a South African to world science and technology.
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Department of Energy's Office
of Science.
For more information, please
contact Steve McGregor (630/252-5580 or media@anl.gov)
at Argonne.
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