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This study presents the electrochemical characterization of a novel, binder-free, plasma-treated aluminum/carbon electrode (“Surge”) using lithium metal half-cells. The low operating potential near 0 V vs. Li/Li+ enables the investigation of the electrode’s charge storage mechanisms and stability limits. We compare its electrochemical behavior in coin cells (CR2032) against two reference configurations: (i) the Surge electrode with a thin copper backer (Surge + Cu-backer) and (ii) a commercial graphite electrode on an aluminum current collector (C-REF). The Surge electrode demonstrated ultra-high initial specific capacities of up to approximately 4500 mAh/g (cycle 1) with Coulombic efficiencies exceeding 85% after the formation cycle. The observed capacity significantly exceeds the theoretical value for Li-Al alloying (993 mAh/g), indicating that lithium plating within the porous carbon scaffold contributes substantially to the total charge storage. However, this high performance was limited to approximately 8 to 9 stable cycles. Post-cycling analysis via scanning electron microscopy combined with energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (SEM/EDX) revealed a dominant failure mechanism: partial dissolution and consumption of the Al current collector leading to material redistribution. Quantitative EDX analysis showed a decrease in Al content from 45 at.% to 12 at.% alongside an increase in oxygen content from 8 at.% to 38 at.%, suggesting extensive Al-oxide formation. Critically, in the absence of a backer, Al-containing material deposited onto the stainless-steel cell components. The Cu backer served to redirect these deposits, improving current collection and modestly extending the short-term durability to approximately 1800 mAh/g at cycle 14 (approximately 75% capacity retention). In contrast, the C-REF control cell reached only approximately 1000 mAh/g (cycle 4) before failing within 5 to 6 cycles, underscoring the inherent instability of bare Al at low potentials. This characterization study establishes the Surge architecture as a successful proof-of-concept for ultra-high capacity charge storage and identifies Al dissolution as the dominant degradation mechanism. Future optimization must focus on stabilizing the Al substrate through protective interphases, alloying, or electrolyte engineering.