Boosting Wide-Temperature Solid-State Lithium Batteries by Polyether-Carbonate Hybridization

Abstract

The development of temperature-resilient solid-state lithium batteries is hindered by several interrelated factors, including the intrinsically low ionic conductivity of solid-state electrolytes, the propensity for lithium dendrite formation due to non-uniform Li+ flux distribution, and interfacial degradation mechanisms that collectively deteriorate electrochemical performance and raise safety concerns at elevated or sub-ambient temperatures. Herein, a polyether-co-carbonate solid polymer electrolyte (PDPC) adaptable for wide temperature range has been developed through an electronic cloud modulation strategy. The synergistic combination of electron-donating ether groups and electron-withdrawing carbonate groups in PDPC effectively regulates the coordination structure and transport characteristics to optimize ionic transport and interfacial stability. The resulting electrolyte, composed of poly(1,3-dioxolane), poly(propylene carbonate), and poly(vinylene carbonate) segments, exhibits high ionic conductivity of 1.8×10-4 S cm-1 at 25 °C, a low activation energy of 0.16 eV, an expanded electrochemical stability window of 4.5 V and an improved Li+ transference number of 0.84. Owing to these outstanding properties, the PDPC-based lithium-metal batteries overcome the challenges of both low- and high-temperature operation, delivering superior electrochemical performance and high Coulombic efficiency across a wide temperature range (-10 to 60 °C).

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Communication
Submitted
31 Dec 2025
Accepted
23 Feb 2026
First published
24 Feb 2026

Mater. Horiz., 2026, Accepted Manuscript

Boosting Wide-Temperature Solid-State Lithium Batteries by Polyether-Carbonate Hybridization

J. Chou, S. yang, C. Zhuo, Z. Wang, H. Guo, X. Li, G. Yan, G. Li, W. Peng, Z. Liu, J. Wang and H. Duan, Mater. Horiz., 2026, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D5MH02486B

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