Abstract

Poly(m-phthaloyl-m-phenylenediamine) (PMIA) is promising as the separator in lithium-ion batteries (LIBs) for its excellent thermostability, insulation and self-extinguishing properties. However, its low mechanical strength and poor electrolyte affinity limit its application in LIBs. In this work, a new PMIA@polyacrylonitrile-polyvinylidene fluoride hexafluoropropylene-titanium dioxide (PMIA@PAN/PVDF-HFP/TiO2) composite fibrous separator with a coaxial core-shell structure was developed by combining coaxial electrospinning, hot pressing, and heat treatment techniques. This separator not only inherits the exceptional thermostability of PMIA, showing no evident thermal shrinkage at 220 °C, but also reveals improved mechanical strength (29.7 MPa) due to the formation of firm connections between fibers with the melted PVDF-HFP. Meanwhile, the massive polar groups in PVDF-HFP play a vital role in improving the electrolyte affinity, which renders the separator a high ionic conductivity of 1.36 × 10−3 S/cm. Therefore, the LIBs with PMIA@PAN/PVDF-HFP/TiO2 separators exhibited excellent cycling and rate performance at 25 °C, and a high capacity retention rate (76.2%) at 80 °C for 200 cycles at 1 C. Besides, the lithium metal symmetric battery assembled by the separator showed a small overpotential, indicating that the separator had a role in inhibiting lithium dendrites. In short, the PMIA@PAN/PVDF-HFP/TiO2 separator possesses a wide application prospect in the domain of LIBs.

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