Supplementary Figure 1. Scanning Electron Microscopy images of the pristine electrodes. (a) negative electrode and (b) positive electrode.

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a b Supplementary Figure 1. Scanning Electron Microscopy images of the pristine electrodes. (a) negative electrode and (b) positive electrode. Images were performed using a FEI/Philips XL4 microscope with a secondary electron detector and an accelerating voltage of kv. Scale bars: µm.

a Free electrolyte b 1 16 15 14 1 st charge : C Li 5. Ti 5 O 1 5 1 15 Li.8 CoO Position (μm) LTO Sep. LCO Interface Interface 13 1 11 1 9 8 6 5 4 3 1 4 3 1-1 - -3-4 Supplementary Figure. LCO/LTO battery charged for 1 hours. (a) Li Scanning ISIS spectroscopic image (slice thickness 1 µm). (b) Series of spectra etracted from the S-ISIS spectroscopic image. The liquid electrolyte signal is small due to partial saturation of its NMR signal. Slices 5 and 8 are less intense because they are astride the interface of electrode and the separator.

a b Voltage vs Li + /Li (V) 3.. 1...5 C/5.6..8.9 1. in Li CoO 1 Voltage (V) Current (ma) 3.. 1...1. -.1 1 5 1 15 5 3 35 Time (hours) Supplementary Figure 3. Electrochemical characteristics of the in situ battery. (a) Working voltage as a function of in Li CoO. The cycle number is indicated close to the curve. (b) Working voltage and (c) current as a function of time.

LiCoO 15 1 st charge C -.1 5 (D1) 1 1 st discharge 15 Time (hours) (C1 ) nd charge 5 (D1 ) 3 35 nd discharge Li6.Ti5O1 Li4.9Ti5O1 5 1 Li.89CoO 15 (C) (C ) (D ) Li5.5Ti5O1 Li5.4Ti5O1 Li.64CoO Li.83CoO Li.65CoO (D) Li5.Ti5O1 Li5.4Ti5O1 5 1 Li.8CoO 15 (C3) 1 Li5.9Ti5O1 Li4.6Ti5O1 (C3 ) Li4.8Ti5O1 Li.5CoO Li.CoO Li.5CoO (D3) Li5.8Ti5O1 (D3 ) Li6.Ti5O1 Li4.8Ti5O1 5 1 Li.86CoO Li.68CoO 15 (C4a) Current (ma) 1 nd discharge.1 5 (C1) nd charge C1 C C3 C4a C4b C5 D1 D D3 D4 D5 C1 C C3 C4 C5 D1 D D3 D4 D5 3 Li4Ti5O1 Voltage (V) (C) 1st discharge 1st charge Li.85CoO Li.61CoO Li6.3Ti5O1 5 (C4 ) (D4) 1 Li.58CoO 15 (D4 ) Li6.4Ti5O1 Li4.5Ti5O1 Li4.6Ti5O1 (C4b) Li6.3Ti5O1 Li.91CoO 5 1 - -4-6 Li.56CoO - -4-6 Li.89CoO - -4-6 Li.58CoO 15 (C5) (C5 ) (D5) Li6.6Ti5O1 Li4.4Ti5O1 (D5 ) Li6.6Ti5O1 Li4.4Ti5O1 5 1 15 Li.54CoO Li.93CoO Li.53CoO Li.9CoO Supplementary Figure 4. S-ISIS images of the first two cycles. All images were recorded after letting the battery rela at the given lithiation stage in open-circuit mode as shown in the electrochemical profile. The spectroscopic images in the first and second charge (first and third columns) are very similar and indicate good behaviour of the battery. This is also true in the first and second discharges (second and fourth columns).

a b 1 st cycle nd cycle 3. Coin cell In situ cell 3. Coin cell In situ cell Voltage vs Li + /Li (V). 1. Voltage vs Li + /Li (V). 1...5.6..8.9 1...5.6..8.9 1. in Li CoO in Li CoO Supplementary Figure 5. Comparison of the electrochemical profiles of a coin cell and the in situ cell. (a) First cycle and (b) Second cycle at C/5. Electrodes of the coin cell are similar to those used in the in situ battery (thickness 515 µm for LTO, 461 µm for LCO). The cycling conditions were identical ecept for the open-circuit stages for S-ISIS imaging in the in situ battery, which created the vertical lines in the electrochemical profile of the in situ battery (no change in but voltage relaation). a b no inversion c inversion of d substraction of (reference) selected slice b&c spectra 18 9 Li G Z 5 μs 4 T.m -1 5 μs shift (ppm) shift (ppm) shift (ppm) Supplementary Figure 6. Acquisition of a localized spectrum with ISIS. (a) ISIS pulse sequence. (b) Schematics of the battery without inversion pulse and resulting reference spectrum. (c) Schematic of the battery with a selective inversion pulse targeting the bottom slice and resulting spectrum. (d) Spectrum of the selected slice obtained from the difference of the spectra in b and c.

398 Hz 1 1 Hz Supplementary Figure. Profile of the selective Hyperbolic secant pulse. It was obtained with a selective echo under gradient in a solution of lithium chloride in a vertical tube (gradient of 3 T m -1 ). Hyperbolic secant pulse duration: 5 µs, power: W. Image (mm).4.3..1 -.1 -. -.3 -.4 44 Hz 15 1 5-5 -1-15 - Image (Hz) Supplementary Figure 8. Profile of the slice selected in a tube containing 1 cm of LCO. The profile is obtained by subtraction of a reference spectrum to reproduce the ISIS approach. We used the same selective pulse and gradient strength as for the in situ study.

Supplementary Discussion The concept behind ISIS (Image Selected In situ Spectroscopy) is to take advantage of the slightly longer longitudinal relaation time and to obtain the localized spectrum of a specific slice within the sample. In Scanning ISIS (S-ISIS) the full image is reconstructed by combining all the slices. Acquisition of a localized spectrum Two eperiments are required for acquiring a slice with ISIS. The first eperiment inverts the spins in the slice of interest. A subsequent 9 radio-frequency pulse creates transverse coherence for detection (Supplementary Fig. 6), with negative contribution from the inverted spins in the slice of interest (red) and positive contribution from the unperturbed spins (grey and blue) of the sample. A second eperiment acquires a spectrum of all Li nuclear spins within the field of view (along the vertical direction in this study) as a reference. Subtraction between both spectra cancels out the signal from the unperturbed spins while it increases the signal of the selected slice. The inversion of the slice of interest is performed with a selective pulse. The offset of the selective pulse controls the position of the slice while the range of frequencies ecited by the selective pulse sets the thickness of the slice. Supplementary Fig. shows the profile of the Hyperbolic Secant pulse used in ISIS on a solution of lithium chloride. The width at half height is 398 Hz. Slice thickness and resolution The thickness of the slice is set by the range of frequencies ecited by the selective pulse. z = ν!"#$ γg! There are two possibilities: the bandwidth of the selective pulse ( ν! ) is set (1) smaller or () broader than the linewidth of the peak under no gradient ( ν! ). Case (1): ν! < ν!, ν!"#$ = ν!. The slice thickness varies across the battery and changes with the state of charge. Case (): ν! > ν!, ν!"#$ = ν!. The thickness is constant and equal to ν!, with a displacement of the piel depending on the chemical shift. We set up the eperiment so as to respect case () for all slices and during the whole process of charging/discharging the battery. We used ν! =4 khz, corresponding to a thickness of 1 µm (G z =3.968 T m -1, γ=16.55 1 6 Hz T -1 ).

Scanning ISIS (S-ISIS) In Scanning-ISIS, the ISIS procedure is repeated while varying the offset of the selective pulse so as to cover all the slices in the sample. The reconstruction of the full spectroscopic image is performed by concatenating the spectra of all the slices. The S-ISIS image at half charge C is shown in Supplementary Fig. with the corresponding spectra for each slice. Limitations The slice selected with ISIS is displaced as a function of the offset frequency; the width of the spectrum under no gradient ν! creates a blurring. Supplementary Fig. 8 shows the image of the 1 µm-thick slice (4.4 khz) selected in a tube containing 1 cm of powdered LCO ( ν! =13 khz at half maimum) with the same selective pulse and gradient strength as in S-ISIS on the in situ battery. It was obtained with subtraction of a reference spectrum to reproduce the ISIS approach. The blurring is epected to be around.5 khz (19 µm) on each side. Interestingly, the slice thickness is only broadened by 6 Hz ( µm), so that blurring can be considered negligible. In the battery during charge and discharge the worst case is encountered at full charge for LTO, with ν! 3 khz. As a consequence, a blurring of 38 µm is epected on each side of the piel, which should result in an increase of the apparent thickness of the LTO electrode. We do not observe such effect in the contour plots of Fig. 3 and Supplementary Fig. 4, and we consider that this effect is negligible in our case. Another potential source of blurring is lithium diffusion after the gradient pulse. It is negligible for solid electrodes as self-diffusion coefficients in such solids are at best 1-11 m s -1. Lithium diffusion in the electrodes would result in a blurring of the slice thickness of less than.1 µm given our gradient stabilization time (5 µs).