Abstract
Naturally occurring halloysite nanotubes (HNTs), a clay mineral characterized by a unique dual-charge architecture, offer a promising strategy for enhancing the performance of composite polymer electrolyte (CPE). In this work, HNTs are introduced as a low-cost, functional filler to simultaneously address two key limitations of poly(vinylidene fluoride-co-hexafluoropropylene) (PVDF-HFP)-based CPE: low ionic conductivity and inadequate lithium-ion transference number. The negatively charged outer surface of HNTs facilitates Li+ transport, while the positively charged inner lumen confines anions such as TFSI−. Controlled acid etching (6 M HCl, 12 h) further optimizes this structure by removing surface impurities and enlarging the lumen, thereby enhancing both charge-directed ion transport pathways. The resulting HNT-modified CPE achieves a high ionic conductivity of 6.1 × 10−4 S⋅cm−1 and a Li+ transference number of 0.73. When assembled into Li||CPE||LiFePO4 cells, the electrolyte enables stable cycling over 300 cycles at 0.2C, retains 119.2 mAh/g at 2C, and delivers 85.7 mAh/g even at 5C, demonstrating excellent cycling stability and rate capability. This study reveals the potential of mineral-derived nanomaterials, with their inherent structural and physicochemical properties, to serve as key functional components in high-performance batteries.