3 resultados para METALLOCENES
em CaltechTHESIS
Resumo:
Evidence for the stereochemical isomerization of a variety of ansa metallocene compounds is presented. For the scandocene allyl derivatives described here, we have established that the process is promoted by a variety of salts in both ether and hydrocarbon solvents and is not accelerated by light. A plausible mechanism based on an earlier proposal by Marks, et al., is offered as an explanation of this process. It involves coordination of anions and/or donor solvents to the metal center with cation assistance to encourage metalcyclopentadienyl bond heterolysis, rotation about the Si-Cp bond of the detached cyclopentadienide and recoordination of the opposite face. Our observations in some cases of thermodynamic racemic:meso ratios under the reaction conditions commonly used for the synthesis of the metallocene chlorides suggests that the interchange is faster than metallation, such that the composition of the reaction mixture is determined by thermodynamic, not kinetic, control in these cases.
Two new ansa-scandocene alkenyl compounds react with olefins resulting in the formation of η3-allyl complexes. Kinetics and labeling experiments indicate a tuck-in intermediate on the reaction pathway; in this intermediate the metal is bound to the carbon adjacent to the silyllinker in the rear of the metallocene wedge. In contrast, reaction of permethylscandocene alkenyl compounds with olefins results, almost exclusively, in vinylic C-H bond activation. It is proposed that relieving transition state steric interactions between the cyclopentadienyl rings and the olefin by either linking the rings together or using a larger lanthanide metal may allow for olefin coordination, stabilizing the transition state for allylic σ-bond metathesis.
A selectively isotopically labeled propylene, CH2CD(13CH3), was synthesized and its polymerization was carried out at low concentration in toluene solution using isospecific metallocene catalysts. Analysis of the NMR spectra (13C, 1H, and 2H) of the resultant polymers revealed that the production of stereoerrors through chain epimerization proceeds exclusively by the tertiaryalkyl mechanism. Additionally, enantiofacial inversion of the terminally unsaturated polymer chain occurs by a non-dissociative process. The implications of these results on the mechanism of olefin polymerization with these catalysts is discussed.
Resumo:
In order to expand our understanding of the mechanism of stereocontrol in syndiospecific α-olefin polymerization, a family of Cs-symmetric, ansa-group 3 metallocenes was targeted as polymerization catalysts. The syntheses of new ansa-yttrocene and scandocene derivatives that employ the doubly [SiMe2]- bridged ligand array (1,2-SiMe2)2{C5H-3,5-(CHMe2)2} (where R = t- butyl, tBuThp; where R = i-propyl, iPrThp) are described. The structures of tBuThpY(µ-Cl)2K(THF)2, tBuThpSc(µ-Cl)2K(Et2O)2, tBuThpYCH(SiMe3)2, Y2{µ2-(tBuThp)2}(µ2-H)2, and tBuThpSc(µ-CH3)2 have been examined by single crystal X-ray diffraction methods. Ansa-yttrocenes and scandocenes that incorporate the singly [CPh2]-bridged ligand array (CPh2)(C5H4)(C13H8)(where C5H4 = Cp, cyclopentadienyl; where C13H8 = Flu, fluourenyl) have also been prepared. Select meallocene alkyl complexes are active single component catalysts for homopolymerization of propylene and 1-pentene. The scandocene tetramethylaluminate complexes generate polymers with the highes molecular weights of the series. Under all conditions examined atactic polymer microstructures are observed, suggesting a chain-end mechanism for stereocontrol.
A series of ansa-tantalocenes have been prepared as models for Ziegler-Natta polymerization catalysts. A singly bridged ansa-tantalocene trimethyl complex, Me2Si(η5-C5H4)2TaMe3, has been prepared and used for the synthesis of a tantalocene ethylene-methyl complex. Addition of propylene to this ethylene-methyl adduct results in olefin exchange to give a mixture of endo and exo propylene isomers. Doubly-silylene bridged ansa-tantalocene complexes have been prepared with the tBuThp ligand; a tantalocene trimethyl complex and a tantalocene methylidene-methyl complex have been synthesized and characterized by X-ray diffraction. Thermolysis of the methylidene-methyl complex affords the corresponding ethylene-hydride complex. Addition of either propylene or styrene to this ethylene-hydride compound results in olefin exchange. In both cases, only one product isomer is observed. Studies of olefin exchange with ansa-tantalocene olefin-hydride and olefin-methyl complexes have provided information about the important steric influences for olefin coordination in Ziegler-Natta polymerization.
Resumo:
A series of Cs- and C1-symmetric doubly-linked ansa-metallocenes of the general formula {1,1'-SiMe2-2,2'-E-('ƞ5-C5H2-4-R1)-(ƞ5-C5H-3',5'-(CHMe2)2)}ZrC2 (E = SiMe2 (1), SiPh2 (2), SiMe2 -SiMe2 (3); R1 = H, CHMe2, C5H9, C6H11, C6H5) has been prepared. When activated by methylaluminoxane, these are active propylene polymerization catalysts. 1 and 2 produce syndiotactic polypropylenes, and 3 produces isotactic polypropylenes. Site epimerization is the major pathway for stereoerror formation for 1 and 2. In addition, the polymer chain has slightly stronger steric interaction with the diphenylsilylene linker than with the dimethylsilylene linker. This results in more frequent site epimerization and reduced syndiospecificity for 2 compared to 1.
C1-Symmetric ansa-zirconocenes [1,1 '-SiMe2-(C5H4)-(3-R-C5H3)]ZrCl2 (4), [1,1 '-SiMe2-(C5H4)-(2,4-R2-C5H2)]ZrCl2 (5) and [1,1 '-SiMe2-2,2 '-(SiMe2-SiMe2)-(C5H3)-( 4-R-C5H2)]ZrCl2 (6) have been prepared to probe the origin of isospecificity in 3. While 4 and 3 produce polymers with similar isospecificity, 5 and 6 give mostly hemi-isotactic-like polymers. It is proposed that the facile site epimerization via an associative pathway allows rapid equilibration of the polymer chain between the isospecific and aspecific insertion sites. This results in more frequent insertion from the isospecific site, which has a lower kinetic barrier for chain propagation. On the other hand, site epimerization for 5 and 6 is slow. This leads to mostly alternating insertion from the isospecific and aspecific sites, and consequently, a hemi-isotactic-like polymers. In comparison, site epimerization is even slower for 3, but enchainment from the aspecific site has an extremely high kinetic barrier for monomer coordination. Therefore, enchainment occurs preferentially from the isospecific site to produce isotactic polymers.
A series of cationic complexes [(ArN=CR-CR=NAr)PtMe(L)]+[BF4]+ (Ar = aryl; R = H, CH3; L = water, trifluoroethanol) has been prepared. They react smoothly with benzene at approximately room temperature in trifluoroethanol solvent to yield methane and the corresponding phenyl Pt(II) cations, via Pt(IV)-methyl-phenyl-hydride intermediates. The reaction products of methyl-substituted benzenes suggest an inherent reactivity preference for aromatic over benzylic C-H bond activation, which can however be overridden by steric effects. For the reaction of benzene with cationic Pt(II) complexes, in which the diimine ligands bear 3,5-disubstituted aryl groups at the nitrogen atoms, the rate-determining step is C-H bond activation. For the more sterically crowded analogs with 2,6-dimethyl-substituted aryl groups, benzene coordination becomes rate-determining. The more electron-rich the ligand, as reflected by the CO stretching frequency in the IR spectrum of the corresponding cationic carbonyl complex, the faster the rate of C-H bond activation. This finding, however, does not reflect the actual C-H bond activation process, but rather reflects only the relative ease of solvent molecules displacing water molecules to initiate the reaction. That is, the change in rates is mostly due to a ground state effect. Several lines of evidence suggest that associative substitution pathways operate to get the hydrocarbon substrate into, and out of, the coordination sphere; i.e., that benzene substitution proceeds by a solvent- (TFE-) assisted associative pathway.