Ligands Make the Difference! Molecular Insights into CrVI/SiO2 Phillips Catalyst during Ethylene Polymerization.
Caterina BarzanAlessandro PiovanoLuca BragliaGiorgia A MartinoCarlo LambertiSilvia BordigaElena C GroppoPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2017)
Operando-sensitive spectroscopic techniques were employed for investigating the changes in the molecular structure of the Cr sites in the CrVI/SiO2 Phillips catalyst during ethylene polymerization. Practically, the most arduous barrier to be overcome was the separation of the chromates reduction carried out by ethylene from the subsequent polymerization. By carefully tuning the experimental parameters we succeeded in observing these two events separately. We found that the sites involved in ethylene polymerization are mainly divalent Cr ions in a 6-fold coordination, in interaction with the oxygenated byproduct (mostly methylformate, generated from the disproportionation of two formaldehyde molecules). Unreduced CrVI species are also present during ethylene polymerization as well as reduced Cr species (either CrII or CrIII) acting as spectators. Our results challenge the old vision of "naked" chromium species (i.e., low coordinated) as the active sites and attribute a fundamental role to external (and flexible) oxygenated ligands that resemble the ancillary ligands in homogeneous polymerization catalysis.