Percolation-Enabled Long-Range Ion Transport to Achieve Conductivity Leap in PVDF-Based Electrolytes

Abstract

Poly(vinylidene fluoride) (PVDF)-based polymer electrolytes are a focal point in solid-state batteries due to their exceptional ionic conductivity. However, the critical role of residual solvent in ion transport mechanism remains a long-standing debate. Addressing this critical issue, this work, for the first time, elucidates a percolation mechanism for ion transport in PVDF-based electrolytes dependent on residual solvent content. Key to this mechanism, a critical ~7 wt% N, N-dimethylformamide (DMF) content triggers a two-orders-of-magnitude ionic conductivity leap in PVDF-LiTFSI electrolytes from ~10-6 S cm-1 to ~10-4 S cm-1 at 30 °C. Multi-scale molecular dynamics simulations reveal this transition is not due to local Li-ion solvation changes, but rather the establishment of a long-range, continuous transport pathway as the "free-state" Li-ion conductive network reaches its percolation threshold. This work provides crucial insights into the conduction mechanism of PVDF-based electrolytes and contributes a novel conceptual framework with valuable design principles for optimizing macroscopic ion transport in polymer-small molecule composite systems via precise microstructural control. These findings pave the way for the development of high-performance, safer next-generation solid-state batteries.

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
11 Jul 2025
Accepted
27 Aug 2025
First published
27 Aug 2025

J. Mater. Chem. A, 2025, Accepted Manuscript

Percolation-Enabled Long-Range Ion Transport to Achieve Conductivity Leap in PVDF-Based Electrolytes

L. Luo, H. Lin, R. Wu, Z. Zhang, Q. Li, Y. Liu, J. Liu, R. Hu and M. Zhu, J. Mater. Chem. A, 2025, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D5TA05612H

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