(756d) New Mechanistic Understanding of Ethylene Polymerization with Isolated d8 Metal Atoms in Zeolites Via Precise Molecular Synthesis and Operando Spectroscopy
AIChE Annual Meeting
2020
2020 Virtual AIChE Annual Meeting
Catalysis and Reaction Engineering Division
Hydrocarbon Conversion III: Hydrocarbon Transformation
Thursday, November 19, 2020 - 8:45am to 9:00am
Zeolite-supported transition metals (single atoms, clusters) represent an important class of materials with uses in chemical industry, emissions control, and as model systems to derive structureâfunction properties in catalysis. Such species show activity for the conversion of ethylene to butenes, where activity is enhanced by adding hydrogen, which stimulates the formation of a metal hydride species. [1,2] However, there existed a lack of detailed studies identifying the intermediates through which such a chemical transformation occurred. Multiple studies sought to reveal the underlying mechanism for this transformation, but the experimental observation of such intermediate species remained elusive for the last 50 years. [3] In this work, we synthesized uniform d8 metal Ir(I) and Ni(II) species supported on zeolites [5] to operando-spectroscopically observe well-resolved metal ligand transitions and provide unique insight on the mechanism for ethylene polymerization in the absence of hydrogen [4]. We found that the oxidative addition of C2H4 to the metal center occurs with the formation of a d6 metal vinyl-hydride species via the abstraction of hydrogen from ethylene, explaining the initiation of the olefin-polymerization cycle on d8 M(I/II) sites in the absence of pre-existing MâH bonds, contrary to commonly accepted view of heterolytic C-H bond dissociation based on DFT. Post-reaction characterization of the materials reveals that the active metal cations remain site-isolated whereas deactivation occurs due to the formation of carbonaceous deposits on the zeolites.
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[2] Khivantsev, K., Vityuk, A., Aleksandrov, H.A., Vayssilov, G.N., Dlom, D., Alexeev, O.S., and Amiridis, M.D. ACS Catal. 7, 5965 (2017).
[3] Brogaard, R.Y. and Olsbye, U., ACS Catal. 6, 1205 (2016).
[4] Jaegers, N.R., Khivantsev, K., Kovarik, L., Klas, D.W., Hu, J.Z., Wang, Y., and Szanyi, Cat. Sci. Tech. 9, 6570 (2019).
[5] Khivantsev, K., et al. Angew. Chem., Int. Ed. 57 (2018)