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Stereospecific polymerizations catalyst chirality

A large part of the stereospecific behavior of polymerization catalysts presented in this review can be rationalized in the framework of a stereoselectivity mechanism involving a chiral orientation of the growing chain. The discovery... [Pg.8]

Guerra, Gaetano, Chirality of Catalysts for Stereospecific Polymerizations, 24, 1. [Pg.597]

In research with Ziegler catalysts, Cossee (11) and Arlmann and Cossee (12) hypothesized that the insertion of propylene monomer takes place in a cis conformation into a titanium-carbon bond. Natta et al. (8) postulated that in the stereospecific polymerization, chiral centers on the surface are needed to produce isotactic polymers. These and other issues regarding the nature of the active sites have helped to increase the interest in investigations of homogeneous metallocene catalysis. [Pg.91]

Natta postulated that for the stereospecific polymerization of propylene with Ziegler-Natta catalysts, chiral active sites are necessary he was not able to verify this hypothesis. However, the metallocene catalysts now provide evidence that chiral centers are the key to isotacticity. On the basis of the Cossee-Arlman mechanism, Pino et al. (164,165) proposed a model to explain the origin of stereoselectivity The metallocene forces the polymer chain into a particular arrangement, which in turn determines the stereochemistry of the approaching monomer. This model is supported by experimental observations of metallocene-catalyzed oligomerization. [Pg.125]

Brintzinger HH, Fischer D, Miilhaupt R, Rieger B, Waymouth RM, Stereospecific Olefin Polymerization with Chiral Metallocene Catalysts, Angew Chem Int Ed Engl 34, 1143 (1995), and refs Therein... [Pg.272]

The vacant sixth coordination site of these Ti centres can take up an olefin molecule to form the reaction complex required for the initiation and subsequent growth of polyolefin chains. Due to their octahedral dichelate-type structure, these Ti(III) centres are chiral and thus able to steer each incoming molecule into a preferred enantiofacial orientation. The stereospecificity with which subsequent propylene units insert into the growing polymer chain is most likely based on a mechanism analogous to that determined for soluble polymerization catalysts (Section 7.4.3). [Pg.229]

Chiral polymers have been applied in many areas of research, including chiral separation of organic molecules, asymmetric induction in organic synthesis, and wave guiding in non-linear optics [ 146,147]. Two distinct classes of polymers represent these optically active materials those with induced chirality based on the catalyst and polymerization mechanism and those produced from chiral monomers. Achiral monomers like propylene have been polymerized stereoselectively using chiral initiators or catalysts yielding isotactic, helical polymers [148-150]. On the other hand, polymerization of chiral monomers such as diepoxides, dimethacrylates, diisocyanides, and vinyl ethers yields chiral polymers by incorporation of chirality into the main chain of the polymer or as a pedant side group [151-155]. A number of chiral metathesis catalysts have been made, and they have proven useful in asymmetric ROM as well as in stereospecific polymerization of norbornene and norbornadiene [ 156-159]. This section of the review will focus on the ADMET polymerization of chiral monomers as a method of chiral polymer synthesis. [Pg.27]

It is in the stereospecific polymerization of propylene that metallocene complexes display their astonishing versatility. Commercial Ziegler-Natta catalysts for isotactic polypropylene - based on combinations of TiCU, MgCl2, Lewis bases and aluminum alkyls - depend on a metal-centered chirality which exists at specific edge and defect sites on the crystal lattice to direct the incoming monomer in a particular orientation. These catalysts produce small amounts of undesirable atactic material due to the presence of achiral active sites. [Pg.3206]

D-Limonene and ot-pinene have been used as renewable solvents and chain transfer agents in metallocene-methylaluminoxane (MAO) catalysed polymerization of ot-olefins. Chain transfer from the catalyst to the solvent reduces the achieved in limonene compared with toluene and also reduces the overall catalyst activity. This was confirmed, as in the ROMP studies, by performing identical reactions in hydrogenated limonene. However, an increase in stereospecificity was seen when D-limonene was used as the solvent. This is measured as the mole fraction of [mmmm] pentads seen in NMR spectra of the polymer. 100% isotactic polypropylene would give a value of 1.0. On performing the same propylene polymerization reactions in toluene and then in limonene, the mole fraction of [mmmm] pentads increased from 0.86 to 0.94, indicating that using a chiral solvent influences the outcome of stereospecific polymerizations. Unfortunately, when a-pinene was used, some poly(a-pinene) was found to form and this contaminates the main polymer product. [Pg.113]


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Catalysts polymeric, chiral

Catalysts polymerizing

Catalysts stereospecific polymerization

Chiral catalysts

Chiral stereospecific

Polymeric chiral

Site-controlled stereospecific polymerizations catalyst chirality

Stereospecific catalyst

Stereospecific polymerizations

Stereospecific polymerizations polymerization

Stereospecific polymerizations stereospecificity

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