Wednesday, May 13, 2026
ADVT 
Interesting

Halifax Professor Wins Canada's Top Science Prize For Battery Research

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Feb, 2017 01:47 PM
    HALIFAX — A Halifax professor who is working with Tesla to make better lithium-ion batteries has won the $1-million Herzberg prize, Canada's top science award.
     
    Dr. Jeff Dahn of Dalhousie University was to receive the Gerhard Herzberg Canada Gold Medal for Science and Engineering Tuesday evening in Ottawa.
     
    The university says Dahn, 60, is one of the world's leading battery researchers, working on lithium and lithium-ion batteries since 1978.
     
    Last summer, he began a "five-year exclusive research partnership" with Tesla Motors, the California electric car company headed by CEO Elon Musk.
     
    "Some of the goals of their collaboration are to develop lithium-ion batteries for automobiles and grid energy storage that are cheaper, more powerful and longer lasting, thus helping to ensure the wider adoption of electric vehicles and renewable energy," according to the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, which awards the Herzberg prize. 
     
    Dalhousie says Dahn has been focused on finding novel materials to meet increasing demand for the batteries, while improving production, storage and sustainability.
     
    Dahn has been a pioneer in batteries for mobile devices, helping make lithium-ion batteries "part of our everyday lives," the research council says.
     
    It says Dahn performed fundamental studies on all of the materials used in lithium-ion batteries, and helped invent some of the positive-electrode materials used in lithium-ion cells for power tools, grid energy storage and electric vehicles.
     
    "Faced with the problem of proving that lithium-ion batteries could be made to last 20 years, without actually waiting 20 years, Dahn and his team invented a high-precision tester that could accurately determine battery lifespan in a matter of weeks instead of decades," the council said.
     
    Two companies have been spun off from the Dahn Lab at Dalhousie.
     
    "Combining fundamental and applied science has been a trademark throughout my career. I will use the Herzberg award to help perpetuate excellence in battery research at Dalhousie University long after my own retirement," Dahn said in a statement. 
     
    Dahn was born in Bridgeport, Conn., and moved to Nova Scotia in 1970 with his family.
     
    The university says it is the third time in four years that a Dalhousie researcher has won the Herzberg prize. Dahn also won the Governor General's Innovation Award last year.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    An Indian Expletive Is The Name Of $23 Cocktail In Singapore

    An Indian Expletive Is The Name Of $23 Cocktail In Singapore
    An interesting cocktail on the menu of Equilibrium, a modern Italian bar and restaurant in Singapore, has an even more interesting name.

    An Indian Expletive Is The Name Of $23 Cocktail In Singapore

    The Murky Role Of Mental Illness In Extremism, Terror

    The Murky Role Of Mental Illness In Extremism, Terror
    After family members of the driver who slammed a truck into a holiday crowd in the French city of Nice said he suffered from depression, questions have been raised again about the links between mental illness, extreme ideology and mass violence.

    The Murky Role Of Mental Illness In Extremism, Terror

    Review: West Side Story is Hauntingly Poignant

    Review: West Side Story is Hauntingly Poignant

    Racial prejudices, violence and a romance thwarted due to intolerance...   The Theat...

    Review: West Side Story is Hauntingly Poignant

    Be Careful What You Wish For: Amir Khan to Vijender Singh

    Be Careful What You Wish For: Amir Khan to Vijender Singh
    Vijender Accepts This Pakistan-Born Boxer's Challenge, Says It'll Be Fun | Picks Olympic Medal Over Pro Success

    Be Careful What You Wish For: Amir Khan to Vijender Singh

    Why do Russians rarely smile? This tourist handbook has the answers

    Why do Russians rarely smile? This tourist handbook has the answers
    Why do Russians rarely smile or why lighting agarbattis (incense sticks) is not welcome in hotel rooms in Moscow or St. Petersburg?

    Why do Russians rarely smile? This tourist handbook has the answers

    The Lure Of Pokemon Go: Respite From A Summer Of Violence

    The Lure Of Pokemon Go: Respite From A Summer Of Violence
    Coming out of nowhere in what's been an otherwise soul-crushing summer filled with endless shootings and other horrors, the smartphone game offers an escape, without removing us completely from the real world.

    The Lure Of Pokemon Go: Respite From A Summer Of Violence