The role of Lewis bases in MgCl2 supported catalysts for olefin polymerization is a subject of continuous interest and discussion in order to obtain more and more active and stereospecific catalysts and to explain their stereoregulating mechanism.
Through molecular calculation and conformational analysis it was possible to identify chelating diethers that have the correct oxygen‐oxygen distance necessary to tightly coordinate with the Mg ions of the support, even in the presence of other strong Lewis acids, and unable to give secondary reactions with TiCl4, AlR3, Ti‐C and Ti‐H bonds. The use of these donors has allowed the synthesis of catalytic systems that are both highly active and stereospecific even in the absence of external donors. Kinetic data of propylene polymerization with these catalyst systems are reported.
The importance of the distance between the donor atoms in bifunctional Lewis bases has been proved also in the case of new classes of internal donors.
Molecular modelling studies have enabled us to formulate models of active sites, located on some corners of MgCl2 crystallites, whose chirality is induced by the presence of a donor molecule in their environment. These models could explain, at least in part, the exceptional increase of isotactic polymer productivity observed for stereospecific catalyst systems, containing only the internal donor, with respect to catalysts lacking the Lewis base and could account for the influence of the donor on the molecular properties of the obtained polymers.
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