From Solid-Solution Electrodes and the Rocking-Chair Concept to Today's Batteries.
Heng ZhangChunmei LiGebrekidan Gebresilassie EshetuStéphane LaruelleSylvie GrugeonKarim ZaghibChristian JulienAlain MaugerDominique GuyomardTeófilo RojoNuria Gisbert-TrejoStefano PasseriniXuejie HuangZhibin ZhouPatrik JohanssonMaria ForsythPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2019)
Lithium-ion batteries (LIBs) have become ubiquitous power sources for small electronic devices, electric vehicles, and stationary energy storage systems. Despite the success of LIBs which is acknowledged by their increasing commodity market, the historical evolution of the chemistry behind the LIB technologies is laden with obstacles and yet to be unambiguously documented. This Viewpoint outlines chronologically the most essential findings related to today's LIBs, including commercial electrode and electrolyte materials, but furthermore also depicts how the today popular and widely emerging solid-state batteries were instrumental at very early stages in the development of LIBs.