Ethylene Polymerizations Catalyzed by Fluorinated “Sandwich” Diimine-Nickel and Palladium Complexes
- University of Houston, TX (United States); University of Houston
- University of Houston, TX (United States)
- Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH (United States)
Nickel and palladium complexes bearing “sandwich” diimine ligands with perfluorinated aryl caps have been synthesized, characterized, and explored in ethylene polymerization reactions. The X-ray crystallographic analysis of the precatalysts 16 and 6b show differences from their non-fluorinated analogues 17 and 19, with the perfluorinated aryl caps centered precisely over the nickel and palladium centers which results in higher buried volumes of the metal centers relative to the non-fluorinated analogs. The sandwich diimine palladium complexes 5a and 5b containing perfluorinated aryl caps polymerize ethylene in a controlled fashion with activities that are substantially increased compared with their non-fluorinated analogues. Migratory insertion rates in relevant methyl ethylene complexes agree with activities exhibited in bulk polymerization experiments. DFT studies suggest that facility of ethylene rotation from its preferred orientation perpendicular to the Pd-alkyl bond into a parallel in-plane conformation contributes to the higher polymerization activity for 5b relative to 18a. For these palladium systems polymer molecular weights can be controlled via hydrogen addition (hydrogenolysis) which is unusual for late transition metal-catalyzed olefin polymerizations with no catalyst deactivation occurring. Sandwich diimine nickel complexes 6a and 6b with perfluorinated aryl caps show ethylene polymerization activities that are about half that of classical tetraisopropyl-substituted catalyst 2 but again are more active than the analogous nonfluorinated sandwich complexes. Ethylene polymerizations exhibit living behavior and branched ultra-high molecular weight polyethylenes (UHMWPEs) with very low molecular weight distributions (less than 1.1) are obtained. The activated nickel catalysts are stable in the absence of monomer and show good long-term stability at 25 °C.
- Research Organization:
- University of Houston, TX (United States)
- Sponsoring Organization:
- USDOE Office of Science (SC), Basic Energy Sciences (BES)
- Grant/Contract Number:
- SC0024250
- OSTI ID:
- 2356821
- Journal Information:
- Journal of the American Chemical Society, Journal Name: Journal of the American Chemical Society Journal Issue: 22 Vol. 146; ISSN 0002-7863
- Publisher:
- American Chemical Society (ACS)Copyright Statement
- Country of Publication:
- United States
- Language:
- English
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