Winston Batteries add Yttrium to the LFP mix to make LYP, it can handle being charged down to -30*C ..... no idea why anyone would leave their car and batteries out in that sort of cold, but that's for other people, not me

Sodium ion can handle -20*C to 60*C and talk of electrolyte changes to handle down to -70*C and up to 100*C, but I doubt that is all in one electrolyte mi.
I'm guessing one for the cold would go up to around +10*C and down to the -70*C, and the hot one, from 100*C down to +20*C, so the same 80*C operating range between low and high and ranges within this 80*C window anywhere in between ........
Sodium ion, being so much cheaper to produce, from far less exotic materials and doesn't have the scary name "Lithium" anywhere in it, will become the dominant chemistry in yrs to come .....
T1 Terry