Enhancing Suppression of Chain Transfer via Catalyst Structural
Evolution in Ethylene (Co)Polymerization
Abstract
Usually, the aniline-based late-transition-metal catalysts often require
bulky steric substituents on both sides of the ortho-aryl position to
achieve efficient suppression of chain transfer in ethylene
polymerization. In this contribution, we demonstrated that α-diimine
catalysts based on naphthylamine with only one bulky ortho-aryl
substituent also demonstrated excellent capabilities to suppress the
chain transfer. Firstly, a class of α-diimine nickel and palladium
complexes with only one o-aryl-dibenzhydryl or o-aryl-dibenzosuberyl
substituent were synthesized and characterized. Secondly, the
as-prepared naphthylamine-based nickel catalysts demonstrated
outstanding activities and yielded lightly branched (16-40/1000C)
polyethylenes with very high molecular weights (445.8-854.3 kg/mol) in
ethylene polymerization. In comparison, the corresponding palladium
catalysts showed moderate activities, generating moderately branched
polyethylenes with moderate molecular weights (21.6-82.0 kg/mol).
Moreover, the palladium catalysts could also copolymerize ethylene and
methyl acrylate (MA), albeit in low activity (level of 103
g·mol-1·h-1),providing E-MA copolymers with low to moderate molecular
weight (1.4-16.3 kg/mol) and a moderate level of incorporation ratio
(2.4-7.4 mol%) and branching density. As compared with aniline-based
nickel and palladium catalysts, the naphthylamine-based catalysts
displayed a superior ability to suppress the chain transfer reactions
and could give access to (co)polymers with orders of magnitude higher
molecular weight in ethylene (co)polymerization.