The conventional commercial polypropylene separator (PP) struggles to inhibit the thermal runaway triggered by dendrite short circuits, and its safety cannot meet the needs of the development of high-energy-density batteries. Herein, an easily commercializable design strategy was employed to induce the aqueous solution of natural polymer hydroxypropylmethylcellulose (HPMC) to self-assemble on the surface of the PP separator by Na2SO4, MnSO4, and Al-2(SO4)(3) to form the chiral nematic liquid crystal (CLC) with excellent performance, and finally the thermally stable separators (H-Na@PP, H-Mn@PP, and H-Al@PP) were obtained. Theoretical calculations and experiments demonstrate that the CLC induced by Na+, Mn2+, and Al3+ can interact with the electrolyte solvent to form a desolvation structure of Li+, which reduces the migration barrier of Li+ through the separator and accelerate the Li+ transport. Furthermore, the ordered CLC structure can ensure uniform electric field and Li+ flux. Hence, Li//LFP, Li (50 mu m)//LFP, and Li//NCM811cells are assembled using these modified separators, featuring remarkable cycling stability and high Coulombic efficiency. As the result, H-Na@PP, H-Mn@PP, and H-Al@PP separators in Li//LFP cell display a high initial capacity of 141.2 mAh/g, 146.7 mAh/g and 130.7 mAh/g at 1C, respectively and stable cycling performance over 1000 cycles. Notably, the capacity retention rate remains high at 87 %, 69 %, and 59 % even after 700 cycles, respectively, which are higher than the 21 % capacity retention rate of PP separator. Meanwhile, the pouch cells equipped with these separators deliver exceptional electrochemical performance and show a lower temperature distribution without thermal runaway behavior under the Phi 3 mm nail penetration test, indicating its feasibility for high-safety energy storage systems.