Phillips catalyst

The Phillips catalyst, or the Phillips supported chromium catalyst, is the catalyst used to produce approximately half of the world's polyethylene. A heterogeneous catalyst, it consists of a chromium oxide supported on silica gel.[1] Polyethylene, the most abundant synthetic polymer, is produced industrially by the polymerization of ethylene:

n C2H4 → (C2H4)n
Structure proposed for the Phillips catalyst.

Although exergonic (i.e., thermodynamically favorable), the reaction requires catalysts. Three main catalysts are employed commercially: the Phillips catalyst, Ziegler–Natta catalysts (based on titanium trichloride), and, for specialty polymers, metallocene-based catalysts.

Preparation and mechanism of action

The Phillips catalyst is prepared by impregnating high surface area silica gel with chromium trioxide or related chromium compounds. The solid precatalyst is then calcined in air to give the active catalyst. Only a fraction of the chromium is catalytically active, a fact that interferes with elucidation of the catalytic mechanism. The active catalyst is often depicted as a chromate ester bound to the silica surface. The mechanism for the polymerization process is the subject of much research, the central question being the structure of the active species, which is assumed to be an organochromium compound.[2] Robert L. Banks and J. Paul Hogan, both at Phillips Petroleum, filed the first patents on the Phillips catalyst in 1953. Four years later, the process was commercialized.[3]

gollark: I guess I can edit it.
gollark: It worked on all my testing systems.
gollark: Why not? Did you try the latest version?
gollark: Also incdec when it works.
gollark: The achievement system and Lorem Ipsum are cool.

References

  1. Max P. McDaniel "A Review of the Phillips Supported Chromium Catalyst and Its Commercial Use for Ethylene Polymerization" Advances in Catalysis, 2010, Volume 53, p. 123. doi:10.1016/S0360-0564(10)53003-7
  2. Klaus H. Theopold "Deprotonation of coordinated ethylene may start Phillips catalysis" Proceedings, U.S. National Academy of Sciences, 2014, vol. 111, pp. 11578–11579, doi:10.1073/pnas.1411822111
  3. J.P. Hogan, R.L. Banks, U.S. Patent 2,825,721 to Phillips Petroleum Company, filed August, 1954 and issued March, 1958.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.