2 research outputs found
Mechanism of Initiation in the Phillips Ethylene Polymerization Catalyst: Redox Processes Leading to the Active Site
The detailed mechanism by which ethylene
polymerization is initiated
by the inorganic Phillips catalyst (Cr/SiO<sub>2</sub>) without recourse
to an alkylating cocatalyst remains one of the great unsolved mysteries
of heterogeneous catalysis. Generation of the active catalyst starts
with reduction of Cr<sup>VI</sup> ions dispersed on silica. A lower
oxidation state, generally accepted to be Cr<sup>II</sup>, is required
to activate ethylene to form an organoCr active site. In this work,
a mesoporous, optically transparent monolith of Cr<sup>VI</sup>/SiO<sub>2</sub> was prepared using sol–gel chemistry in order to monitor
the reduction process spectroscopically. Using in situ UV–vis
spectroscopy, we observed a very clean, stepwise reduction by CO of
Cr<sup>VI</sup> first to Cr<sup>IV</sup>, then to Cr<sup>II</sup>.
Both the intermediate and final states show XANES consistent with
these oxidation state assignments, and aspects of their coordination
environments were deduced from Raman and UV–vis spectroscopies.
The intermediate Cr<sup>IV</sup> sites are inactive toward ethylene
at 80 °C. The Cr<sup>II</sup> sites, which have long been postulated
as the end point of CO reduction, were observed directly by high-frequency/high-field
EPR spectroscopy. They react quantitatively with ethylene to generate
the organoCr<sup>III</sup> active sites, characterized by X-ray absorption
and UV–vis spectroscopy, which initiate polymerization
Mechanism of Initiation in the Phillips Ethylene Polymerization Catalyst: Redox Processes Leading to the Active Site
The detailed mechanism by which ethylene
polymerization is initiated
by the inorganic Phillips catalyst (Cr/SiO<sub>2</sub>) without recourse
to an alkylating cocatalyst remains one of the great unsolved mysteries
of heterogeneous catalysis. Generation of the active catalyst starts
with reduction of Cr<sup>VI</sup> ions dispersed on silica. A lower
oxidation state, generally accepted to be Cr<sup>II</sup>, is required
to activate ethylene to form an organoCr active site. In this work,
a mesoporous, optically transparent monolith of Cr<sup>VI</sup>/SiO<sub>2</sub> was prepared using sol–gel chemistry in order to monitor
the reduction process spectroscopically. Using in situ UV–vis
spectroscopy, we observed a very clean, stepwise reduction by CO of
Cr<sup>VI</sup> first to Cr<sup>IV</sup>, then to Cr<sup>II</sup>.
Both the intermediate and final states show XANES consistent with
these oxidation state assignments, and aspects of their coordination
environments were deduced from Raman and UV–vis spectroscopies.
The intermediate Cr<sup>IV</sup> sites are inactive toward ethylene
at 80 °C. The Cr<sup>II</sup> sites, which have long been postulated
as the end point of CO reduction, were observed directly by high-frequency/high-field
EPR spectroscopy. They react quantitatively with ethylene to generate
the organoCr<sup>III</sup> active sites, characterized by X-ray absorption
and UV–vis spectroscopy, which initiate polymerization