Image copyright U TEXAS / BINGHAMTON / AFP Image caption (L-R) John B Goodenough, M Stanley Whittingham, Akira Yoshino

Three scientists have been awarded the 2019 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for the development of lithium-ion batteries.

John B Goodenough, M Stanley Whittingham and Akira Yoshino share the prize for their work on these rechargeable devices, which are used for portable electronics.

At the age of 97, Prof Goodenough is the oldest ever Nobel laureate.

Professor of chemistry Olof Ramström said lithium-ion batteries had "enabled the mobile world".

The trio will share the prize money of nine million kronor (£738,000).

The lithium-ion battery is a lightweight, rechargeable and powerful battery that is used in everything from mobile phones to laptops to electric cars.

The Nobel Committee said: "Lithium-ion batteries are used globally to power the portable electronics that we use to communicate, work, study, listen to music and search for knowledge."

Media playback is unsupported on your device Media caption How do you choose a Nobel prize winner?

Committee member Sara Snogerup Linse, from Lund University, said: "We have gained access to a technical revolution. The laureates developed lightweight batteries of high enough potential to be useful in many applications."

In addition to their use in electric vehicles, the rechargeable devices could also store significant amounts of energy from renewable sources, such as solar and wind power.

Speaking at an event held at the UK's Royal Society, where he had already been scheduled to receive the society's Copley Medal honouring his work, Prof Goodenough said: "I didn't ever lobby for or look forward to this particular day, but I'm very happy it arrived."

The foundation of the lithium-ion battery was laid during the oil crisis of the 1970s. M Stanley Whittingham, 77, who was born in Nottingham, UK, worked to develop energy technologies that did not rely on fossil fuels.

He discovered an energy-rich material called titanium disulphide, which he used to make a cathode - the positive terminal - in a lithium battery.

Whittingham, who is now based at Binghamton University in Vestal, US, made the anode, the battery's negative terminal, from metallic lithium. This has a strong preference for releasing electrons, making it very suitable for use in batteries.

Image copyright Getty Images Image caption The lithium-ion battery "enabled the mobile world"

This resulting device was able to release just over two volts, but the metallic lithium made it explosive.

John B Goodenough, who is American but was born in Germany, predicted that the cathode could be improved if it was made from a metal oxide, rather than a sulphide.

In 1980, after searching for the ideal material, Goodenough, who is a professor at the University of Texas, Austin, used cobalt oxide to boost the lithium battery's potential to four volts.

With Goodenough's cathode as a basis, Akira Yoshino, 71, created the first commercially viable lithium-ion battery in 1985.

Yoshino, who was born in Osaka, Japan, works for the Asahi Kasei Corporation and Meijo University.

Sony released the first commercial lithium-ion batteries in 1991, based on Yoshino's configuration.

Image copyright ANNA-MARIE MARCH Image caption Prof Goodenough was in the UK to receive the Royal Society's Copley Medal

Prof Ramström, a Nobel committee member from the University of Massachusetts, Lowell, in the US, commented: "This battery is such a very, very good battery. It's high-powered with high energy efficiency, so it has found applications almost everywhere."

Prof Dame Carol Robinson, president of the UK's Royal Society of Chemistry, said of the laureates: "Their pioneering research is everywhere you look and a great example of how chemistry has paved the way for everything from the mobile phone in your pocket to the electric vehicles and home energy storage of the future."

Bonnie Charpentier, president of the American Chemical Society (ACS), commented: "In the face of increasing threats from extreme climate change, today's announcement shines a welcome bright light on the portability of energy that has enabled unprecedented advances in communication, transportation and other tools to support critical aspects of life around the world."

Prof Sir Venki Ramakrishnan, president of the Royal Society, said: "Scientific breakthroughs are rarely - if ever - a solo endeavour and it is absolutely fitting that this year's Nobel Prize for Chemistry should be shared in this way."

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Previous winners of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry

Image copyright GAVIN MURPHY/NATURE/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY Image caption A bacterial "motor" as seen with cryo-electron microscopy

2018 - Discoveries about enzymes earned Frances Arnold, George P Smith and Gregory Winter the prize

2017 - Jacques Dubochet, Joachim Frank and Richard Henderson were awarded the prize for improving images of biological molecules

2016 - Jean-Pierre Sauvage, Fraser Stoddart and Bernard Feringa shared the prize for the making machines on a molecular scale.

2015 - Discoveries in DNA repair earned Tomas Lindahl and Paul Modrich and Aziz Sancar the award.

2014 - Eric Betzig, Stefan Hell and William Moerner were awarded the prize for improving the resolution of optical microscopes.

2013 - Michael Levitt, Martin Karplus and Arieh Warshel shared the prize, for devising computer simulations of chemical processes.

2012 - Work that revealed how protein receptors pass signals between living cells and the environment won the prize for Robert Lefkowitz and Brian Kobilka.