Journal of Polymer Science Part A: Polymer Chemistry, Vol.45, No.17, 3941-3948, 2007
Exploring pathways to reduce the distribution of active sites in the Ziegler-Natta polymerization of propylene
Chemical treatments of classical supported Ziegler-Natta precatalysts were conducted by using additional bulky ligands to attempt to narrow and homogenize the active sites distribution in propylene polymerization. Additions of monodentate ligands such as bis(trimethylsilyl)amide, cyclopentadieryl derivates or triphenylsilanol were seen to slow down the polymerization without modifying the distribute properties of polypropylenes. In the case of multidentate ligands (porphines or biquinolines), in addition to the poisoning of active sites, an extraction of titanium from the catalyst surface is observed. A decrease of both melting point and isotacticity (II%) of polymers using these compounds suggest that the most isospecific titanium sites are first extracted from the MgCl2-surface. The narrowing of the molecular weight distribution confirms that the highly isospecific sites are the most active sites, producing the higher molecular weight polymers. Moreover, this study shows that the distributed properties of polymers are due to the chemical diversity of the active sites with various steric and electronic environments at the catalyst surface and not to mass transfer limitations. (C) 2007 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Keywords:active sites distribution;isotactic;MgCl2-supported catalysts;poly(propylene);Ziegler-Natta polymerization