Propene homopolymers have been produced by employing three C-1-symmetric metallocene molecules (1, 2 and 3), each having t-butyl substituent(s) on the Cp, on the fluorenyl or on both aromatic moieties activated with methylaluminoxane at different polymerization temperatures and monomer concentrations. Polymers' microstructures determined by C-13 NMR spectroscopy suggest that the otherwise dominant alternating mechanism governed by the chain migratory insertion is largely replaced by the competing site epimerization mechanism, as a direct result of the imposing steric bulk of the t-butyl substituent on one of the distal positions of the Cp moiety. This phenomenon is more pronounced with 3 when a second t-butyl is present in the same half-space of the molecule making the site epimerization mandatory. The lower activity of catalyst 3 with respect to catalyst 2 is also in line with the necessity for the polymer chain to back-skip (or the site to epimerize) to its original position before the subsequent monomer insertion. Chain end group analyses by H-1 NMR spectroscopy have revealed that the formation of vinylidene end groups, either via -H elimination or as a result of direct chain transfer to the monomer after an ordinary 1,2-insertion is the prevailing chain termination route. A correlation between the relative concentrations of vinylidene end groups of polypropene (PP) polymers produced with each catalyst and the corresponding polypropenes' molar masses was found, indicating the lower the relative concentrations of vinylidene end groups, the higher the molar masses.

Propene Polymerization with C-1-Symmetric Fluorenyl-Metallocene Catalysts

Boggioni Laura;Losio Simona;Tritto Incoronata
2017

Abstract

Propene homopolymers have been produced by employing three C-1-symmetric metallocene molecules (1, 2 and 3), each having t-butyl substituent(s) on the Cp, on the fluorenyl or on both aromatic moieties activated with methylaluminoxane at different polymerization temperatures and monomer concentrations. Polymers' microstructures determined by C-13 NMR spectroscopy suggest that the otherwise dominant alternating mechanism governed by the chain migratory insertion is largely replaced by the competing site epimerization mechanism, as a direct result of the imposing steric bulk of the t-butyl substituent on one of the distal positions of the Cp moiety. This phenomenon is more pronounced with 3 when a second t-butyl is present in the same half-space of the molecule making the site epimerization mandatory. The lower activity of catalyst 3 with respect to catalyst 2 is also in line with the necessity for the polymer chain to back-skip (or the site to epimerize) to its original position before the subsequent monomer insertion. Chain end group analyses by H-1 NMR spectroscopy have revealed that the formation of vinylidene end groups, either via -H elimination or as a result of direct chain transfer to the monomer after an ordinary 1,2-insertion is the prevailing chain termination route. A correlation between the relative concentrations of vinylidene end groups of polypropene (PP) polymers produced with each catalyst and the corresponding polypropenes' molar masses was found, indicating the lower the relative concentrations of vinylidene end groups, the higher the molar masses.
2017
Istituto per lo Studio delle Macromolecole - ISMAC - Sede Milano
propene
metallocene catalysts
microstructure
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Descrizione: Propene Polymerization with C1-Symmetric Fluorenyl-Metallocene Catalysts
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/332623
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