Chromocene supported by silica is a traditional industrial ethylene polymerization catalyst that does not require aluminum alkyl cocatalyst
however
its initiating mechanism for ethylene polymerization remains unclear up to now. The feasibility of metallacycle and oxachromacycle mechanisms suggested in literatures
as well as the chroma-Cpcycle mechanism which was firstly proposed in this work were systematically investigated by DFT method. It was found that chain initiation could be achieved with a relatively low barrier (
ca
. 24.9kcal/mol) in the metallacycle mechanism
which was consistent with the experiment results. However
because of the large steric effect of the metallacycle
the subsequent propagation would be very slow due to the high insertion barrier (
ca
. 31kcal/mol). For the oxachromacycle mechanism
both the initiation and insertion barriers were very high
and the bonding between Cr and silica support would be impaired by C
2
H
4
insertion
which made this mechanism nearly impossible. With respect to the chroma-Cp-cycle mechanism
the energy for cyclopentadienyl slippage to weaken its coordination with Cr center is very high
making the initiation barrier as high as 37.3kcal/mol
which contradicted with the fast initiation nature of S-9 catalyst. Nevertheless
the low barrier (
ca
. 20kcal/mol) for insertion ensured a fast propagation
which was in agreement with experimental observations. In this work
molecular simulation methods are used to study three possible initiation mechanisms including metallacycle mechanism
oxachromacycle mechanism and chroma-Cp-cycle mechanism for S-9 catalyst
which gave a relatively deep understanding on this catalyst under a molecular level.