As an important component of lithium-ion batteries, all-solid-state electrolytes should possess high ionic conductivity, excellent flexibility, and relatively high mechanical strength. All-solid-state polymer electrolytes (ASSPEs) based on polymers seem to be able to meet these requirements. However, pure ASSPEs have relatively low ionic conductivity, and the addition of inorganic fillers such as lithium salts will reduce their flexibility and mechanical strength. To address the above issues, in this paper, the solvent-free method was used to prepare a poly(vinylidenefluoride-co-hexafluoropropylene)/lithium bis(trifluoromethanesulfonyl) imide/poly(ethylene oxide) all-solid-state polymer electrolyte, which was then subjected to 4 × 4 magnification synchronous bidirectional stretching. Subsequently, it was multilayered with PEO-based composite polymer electrolytes to obtain multilayered composite polymer electrolytes (MCPEs). Bidirectional stretching provides superior in-plane and out-of-plane mechanical properties to MCPEs by inducing molecular chain orientation, which suppresses the growth of lithium dendrites. Concurrently, it facilitates the formation of the β-crystal form of PVDF-HFP, thereby weakening the ion solvation effect and reducing the lithium-ion migration energy barrier. Multilayered compounding improves the interfacial contact between MCPEs and electrodes, thereby reducing the interfacial impedance. Experiments have demonstrated that the MCPEs prepared in this paper exhibit high ionic conductivity at room temperature (1.83 × 10-4 S cm-1), low interfacial resistance (547 Ω cm-2), excellent mechanical properties (26 MPa), and excellent cycling rate performance (a capacity retention rate of 90% after 110 cycles at 0.1 C), which can meet the performance requirements of lithium-ion batteries for ASSPEs.
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