A battery is made up of several individual cells that are connected to one another. Each cell contains three main parts: a positive electrode (a cathode), a negative electrode (an anode) and a liquid electrolyte. Just like alkaline dry cell batteries, such as the ones used in clocks and TV remote controls, lithium-ion batteries. Inside a lithium-ion battery, oxidation-reduction (Redox) reactions take place. Reduction takes place at the cathode. There, cobalt oxide combines with lithium ions to form lithium-cobalt oxide (LiCoO2). The half-reaction is:. When the lithium-ion battery in your mobile phone is powering it, positively charged lithium ions (Li+) move from the negative anode to the positive cathode. They do this by moving through the.