As the demand for mobile energy storage devices has steadily increased during the past decades due to the rising popularity of portable electronics as well as the continued implementation of electromobility, energy density has become a crucial metric in the development of modern batteries. It was realized early on that the successful utilization of silicon as negative electrode material in lithium-ion batteries would be a quantum leap in improving achievable energy densities due to the roughly ten-fold increase in specific capacity compared to the state-of-the-art graphite material. However, being an alloying type material rather than an intercalation/insertion type, silicon poses numerous obstacles that need to be overcome for its successf...