Lithium Cobalt Oxide LiCoO₂
🇯🇵 Sony — the chemistry that made "lithium-ion" a household possibility
WikimediaEvery chemistry on this page is a descendant of one 1991 decision: Sony needed a rechargeable cell for camcorders, and cobalt oxide's neat layered structure gave lithium ions a clean staircase to climb. It was never meant for a car — cobalt is expensive, and a fully-charged LCO cell is genuinely dangerous if punctured or overcharged.
Which is exactly why the first electric car of the modern era used it anyway. Tesla's 2008 Roadster was built before any EV-specific chemistry existed at automotive scale, so it used thousands of repurposed 18650 laptop cells — cobalt oxide, wired in the only configuration anyone knew how to mass-produce.





