The anodic oxidation stability of battery components like the conductive carbon black (Super C65) and the co-solvent ethylene carbonate (EC) is of great relevance, especially with regards to high-voltage cathode materials. In this study, we use On-line Electrochemical Mass Spectrometry (OEMS) to deconvolute the CO and CO 2 evolution from the anodic oxidation of carbon and electrolyte by using a fully 13 C-isotope labeled electrolyte based on ethylene carbonate with 2 M LiClO 4 . We present a newly developed two-compartment cell, which provides a tight seal between anode and cathode compartment via a solid Li + -ion conducting separator, and which thus allows us to examine the effect of trace amounts of water on the anodic oxidation of carbon ( 12 C) and ethylene carbonate ( 13 C) at high potentials (> 4.5 V) and 10 to 60 • C. Moreover, we report on the temperature dependence of the water-driven hydrolysis of ethylene carbonate accompanied by CO 2 evolution. Finally, by quantifying the evolution rates of 12 CO/ 12 CO 2 and 13 CO/ 13 CO 2 at 5.0 V, we demonstrate that the anodic oxidation of carbon and electrolyte can be substantial, especially at high temperature and in the presence of trace water, posing significant challenges for the implementation of 5 V cathode materials. The requirements placed on Li-ion battery technology have changed from powering small portable electronics to applications demanding high energy and high power density, such as hybrid and plug-in electric vehicles.1,2 As a result, high-voltage cathode materials have been developed that raise the cell voltage from 3.7 V in the case of a traditional LiMO 2 (M = Co, Ni, Mn) cathode to 4.8 V in new cathodes such as the high-voltage spinel LiNi 0.5 Mn 1.5 O 4 (LNMO) or LiCoPO 4 (LCP).3-6 The state-of-the-art electrolyte, a mixture of ethylene carbonate (EC) and diethyl carbonate (DEC), dimethyl carbonate (DMC), and/or ethyl methyl carbonate (EMC) with dissolved LiPF 6 salt, tends to decompose on the surface of the delithiated cathode at potentials higher than 4.5 V vs. Li/Li + , especially at high temperature.7-12 Thus, the practical application of these high-voltage materials remains hindered by several obstacles: [13][14][15][16][17][18] (i) the limited anodic stability of electrolyte solvents and salts as well as of binders, (ii) the loss of active Li + -ions, (iii) the corrosion of the aluminum current collector, and (iv) the instability of conductive carbon additives due to anion intercalation and/or carbon oxidation.While the corrosion of conductive carbons is suggested by the frequently observed increase of the electrical resistivity of long-term cycled high-voltage cathodes, 15 quantitative measurement on the anodic decomposition of carbons have only been made in the context of Li-air battery research, making use of isotopically labeled battery components to decouple electrode and electrolyte related CO 2 evolution. For example, Thotiyl et al. used a 13 C carbon cathode in DMSO and tetraglyme-based electrolyte to study CO 2 evolution from...