Vadlamudi 2009
Vadlamudi 2009
Vadlamudi 2009
200950801 1
the metallocene catalyst leads to LLDPEs across the molecular weight distribution of
with narrow molecular weight and narrow this novel resin. This is accomplished by
inter-chain comonomer composition. An characterizing the branching and chain
early benefit of the metallocene chemistry length microstructure of two sets of frac-
was the production of polyethylene resins tions, one set was obtained by molecular
with bimodal molecular weight distribu- weight fractionation using a standard
tions and a preferred introduction of the solvent/non-solvent technique, and a sec-
comonomer in the longest chains for a ond set fractionating by the 1-hexene
superior process/properties balance.[3,4] content via preparative TREF. The avail-
This microstructure differs from the ability of independent fractions allows
characteristic inter-chain comonomer dis- comparative analysis of the bivariate dis-
tribution given by classical Ziegler-Natta tribution profiles obtained from each type
catalysts where the shorter chains have the of fractionation. In addition, the thermal
highest concentration of comonomer.[5] It properties and crystallization behavior of
has been speculated that the incorporation both types of fractions are discussed in
of the comonomer in the high molar mass reference to the behavior of random model
portion of the distribution increases the ethylene copolymers and single site metal-
number of tie-chains (molecules that locene-made LLDPEs that are known to
connect two or more crystallites) account- have a nearly equivalent inter-chain como-
ing for better balanced properties and nomer content and random intra-chain
enhanced impact.[6] distribution.
Although this concept was initially
engineered via blending different propor-
tions of high and low molecular weight Experimental Part
metallocene LLDPEs with high or low
comonomer contents,[7] resins with bimodal The starting metallocene catalyzed 1-hex-
comonomer composition distribution (BCD) ene LLDPE resin was recently produced in
and/or bimodal molecular weight distribu- a commercial gas-phase Unipol-type reac-
tion were subsequently synthesized using tor using standard conditions and the
tandem (staggered) series reactors. Special methodology described in reference 8.
attention was given to properties of The whole resin was fractionated by
LLDPEs with a placement of the comono- molecular mass into 10 fractions using the
mer as a function of molecular weight solvent/non-solvent fractionation techni-
reversed or orthogonal to the standard que (these fractions are termed M frac-
distribution of Z/N catalyzed LLDPEs, i.e., tions).[9] The fractionation was carried out
with an increasing comonomer content with at 130 8C using xylene/diethylene glycol
increasing molecular weight. These resins monobutyl ether (DEGME) as solvent/
are referred as having bimodal orthogonal non-solvent pair. The content of non-
comonomer composition distribution solvent was varied between 60 and 41%.
(BOCD). The process and properties of Both solvents were stabilized with 600 ppm
LLDPE resins of this type made in single of BHT (butylated hydroxy toluene). A set
gas-phase reactors are described in a US of 11 comonomer composition fractions
2005 patent.[8] A film grade ethylene was also obtained using preparative tem-
1-hexene resin (1.0 MI, 0.920 g/cm3 density) perature rising elution fractionation
produced following this method resulted in (TREF) in a CRYSTAF-TREF instrument,
enhanced Elmendorf tear in the machine Model MC2 manufactured by Polymer
and transverse directions, MD and TD Char S.A., Valencia, Spain, with ortho-
(>400 g/mil), over the present resins dichloro benzene (o-DCB) as elution
values,[4] and with high dart impact. Our solvent, stabilized with 300 ppm of BHT
interest here is to characterize the details of (T fractions).[10,11] The 0.4 g/100cc solution
the distribution of the content of 1-hexene was dissolved at 160 8C, subsequently
Copyright ß 2009 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim www.ms-journal.de
Macromol. Symp. 2009, 282, 1–13 3
Table 1.
Molecular weight and NMR branching data of the whole ethylene 1-hexene initial resin and fractions. M-F# refers
to molecular weight fractions and T-F# refers to TREF fractions.
Copyright ß 2009 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim www.ms-journal.de
4 Macromol. Symp. 2009, 282, 1–13
Figure 1.
(a) GPC profiles of M Fractions. The curves shift systematically to higher values with increasing fraction number.
The profile of the unfractionated resin is shown as black thicker line. (b) TREF profiles of M Fractions.
Copyright ß 2009 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim www.ms-journal.de
Macromol. Symp. 2009, 282, 1–13 5
fractions of Table 1 with 1-hexene content 95 8C in the TREF profiles. The GPC
changing from 5.48 to 0.44 mol% among the curves are relatively broad, as expected
fractions. The increase in branching paral- from the results of Figure 1b, while the
lels the increase in Mw, following the TREF profiles of Figure 2b are narrow and
characteristics of BOCD resins. It does progressively shift to higher temperatures,
not follow a systematic increase with Mn as the content of 1-hexene decreases.
because of the large polydispersity in chain Notice that the least branched fractions,
length of fractions with a fixed content of T-F10 and T-F11, are expected to have
1-hexene, as shown by the relatively high much broader molecular weights than
Mw/Mn values in the Table. Details of lower T fractions (T-F1 – T-F3), as the
chain length distribution and homogeneity molecules of T-F10 and T-F11 correspond
of 1-hexene content distribution of each T to the Te1 component of all M fractions
fraction are extracted from the GPC and (see Figure 1b). One explanation for the
TREF profiles of each TREF fraction relatively narrow GPG profiles of T-F10
shown in Figure 2(a,b). and T-F11 is that some of the molecules in
Unimodal distributions are the general the 103–104 molecular weight range elute
features of the T fractions, except for a with highly branched molecules at the
small peak in the low molecular weight side lowest elution temperatures. This would
of the GPC profiles and between 85 and explain the small peaks in the profiles of
Figure 2.
(a) GPC profiles of each T fraction. (b) TREF profiles of each T fraction
Copyright ß 2009 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim www.ms-journal.de
6 Macromol. Symp. 2009, 282, 1–13
Figure 2(a) and at 93 8C in the profiles of Density Functions (PDF) or bivariate
T-F1 to T-F5 of Figure 2(b). Moreover, distributions were computed separately
repeated TREF fractionations led to very for each M and T sets of fractions. The
similar results. bivariate three-dimensional distribution
A two-dimensional plot of the average was constructed assuming independence
Mw data of each TREF fraction over the of the molecular weight distributions
TREF profile of the unfractionated (MWD) and elution temperature distribu-
LLDPE, such as Figure 3, is often used tions (ETD). From the GPC and TREF
to characterize the molecular weight – profiles of M fractions the bivariate was
comonomer content cross-distribution of obtained as:
these copolymers.[4] In a further step, Ortin
et al. in 2007 described an automated method P
i¼10
wM-Fi fM-Fi ðmÞfM-Fi ðtÞ
to represent in a 3D map the molecular fM ðm; tÞ ¼ i¼1
weight distributions of TREF eluted material P
i¼10
wM-Fi
in a range of temperatures.[13] i¼1
According to Figure 3, the character- and from the GPC and TREF profiles of T
istics of the cross - distribution of the novel fractions as:
resin appear analogous to a BOCD copo-
lymer because the comonomer content P
j¼11
increases with the average Mw data. wT -Fj fT -Fj ðmÞfT -Fj ðtÞ
j¼1
However, this is not accurate since GPC fT ðm; tÞ ¼
P
j¼11
and TREF profiles of M-F8 to M-F10 wT -Fj
fractions indicate that the initial resin j¼1
Figure 3.
TREF profile of whole resin and weight average molecular weight of TREF fractions (filled squares) collected at
the indicated elution temperature.
Copyright ß 2009 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim www.ms-journal.de
Macromol. Symp. 2009, 282, 1–13 7
Figure 4.
Bivariate distribution and surface contour from data corresponding to M fractions.
fT-Fj (t) ¼ TREF profile of TREF fraction weight distribution than the range of the
T-Fj first component. Although there is agree-
wM-Fi ¼ Weight fraction of M fraction ment in the general features of the PDF
M-Fi distribution from both sets of fractions, the
wT-Fj ¼ Weight fraction of TREF fraction contour topological view or weight fraction
T-Fj distribution is not identical. The mismatch
reflects experimental uncertainties from
Using spline interpolation for data each type of fractionation. For example,
smoothing, PDF distributions are plotted the solvent non-solvent technique leads to
in Figure 4 (from data of M fractions), and fractions that are not unimodal in chain
in Figure 5 (from data of T fractions). Both length, and the extent to which co-crystal-
plots display graphically the same general lization may occur during TREF prepara-
unique complex bimodal 1-hexene compo- tive fractionation, and thus affect the TREF
sition distribution of the resin. The heights profiles is unknown. The uncertainties from
of the 3-D profile indicate two major both fractionation types are averaged in the
components moving in increasing direction joint PDF, f (m,t) as:
of the elution temperature axis (inversely
proportional to the comonomer content). fM ðm; tÞ þ fT ðm; tÞ
f ðm; tÞ ¼
One component corresponds to chains that 2
elute in a narrow temperature range, at with fM (m, t) and fT (m, t) given as:
95 8C (1 mol% 1-hexene). These mole-
cules have narrow 1-hexene content and f (m, t) ¼ Joint PDF of specimens fractio-
broad molecular weight distribution. A nated by TREF, and by molecular weight
second component corresponds to mole- f M (m, t) ¼ Joint PDF of molecular weight
cules that elute in a broad temperature fractions
range, between 20 and 90 8C. The range of fT (m, t) ¼ Joint PDF of TREF fractions
comonomer content of the latter molecules
is broad, between 11 and 2 mol% 1-hexene, The combined profile is shown in
and have somewhat narrower molecular Figure 6.
Copyright ß 2009 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim www.ms-journal.de
8 Macromol. Symp. 2009, 282, 1–13
Figure 5.
Bivariate distribution and surface contour from data corresponding to T fractions.
Figure 6.
Joint bivariate distribution and surface contour from data corresponding to M and T fractions.
Copyright ß 2009 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim www.ms-journal.de
Macromol. Symp. 2009, 282, 1–13 9
Figure 7.
Melting endotherms of molar mass fractions (M fractions) after cooling from the melt at 10 8C/min. The arrows
indicate the variation of the bimodal comonomer composition with increasing molecular weight.
conformity with expectations from the PDF cene copolymers is single peaked, while
distribution. For example, TREF analyses double melting is expected for fractions
of the individual M fractions indicated with a bimodal 1-hexene content. As seen
compositional heterogeneity of molecules in Figure 7 most M fractions display double
with a fixed length, possibly of a bimodal melting. The variation of the peak melting
nature. This feature is tested by analyzing temperature as a function of molecular
the melting behavior of these fractions in weight is given in Figure 8(a) where the
reference to the behavior of random continuous line represents the data of
ethylene copolymers of matched comono- hydrogenated polybutadienes (HPBDs)
mer content narrowly distributed across an with 2.2 mol% ethyl branches.[16] HPBDs
also narrow molecular weight distribution. are model materials analogs to random
Melting data for the latter are available ethylene 1-butene copolymers. They have
from previous works.[15–18] very narrow molecular weight distribution
Under relatively rapid crystallization, (1.2), uniform inter-chain branching con-
the melting of hydrogenated polybuta- tent and a random intra-chain distribution
dienes and narrowly distributed metallo- of branches. Since both, the ethyl and the
Figure 8.
Variation of the melting peak of M fractions with molecular weight (a) and with mol% of branch points
(b). Squares and triangles denote bimodal melting (see text). The continuous lines represent the melting
behavior of model random ethylene 1-alkene copolymers (ethyl and longer branches) extracted from
references 15 – 18.
Copyright ß 2009 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim www.ms-journal.de
10 Macromol. Symp. 2009, 282, 1–13
butyl branch are excluded from the crystal- plots of the observed melting temperatures
line regions, HPBDs are ideal copolymers versus the NMR averaged branching con-
to test for inter-molecular compositional tent, such as Figure 8(b), contain data that
heterogeneity or for the non random are above or below the HPBD data. Data
intra-molecular branching distribution in above the reference line correspond to
matched ethylene copolymers. melting of crystallites formed from the
The observed double melting for M high-density component of the M fractions,
fractions with Mw > 100,000 g/mol is in while those below the line correspond to
agreement with the bimodal comonomer the lower density component of the same
composition behavior inferred from the fraction.
TREF profiles, earlier referred as Te1 As shown, the melting behavior gives
and Te2 components. Note in Figure 8(a) additional evidence for the heterogeneous
the modest decrease of the highest melting compositional nature of the molecular
peak with increasing molecular weight, weight fractions. Each fraction is a mixture
paralleling the trend of the model of chains with two different l-hexene
HPBDs.[16] This reflects that all M fractions contents. This heterogeneity also affects
have one population of molecules with the DSC-measured isothermal crystalliza-
similar low 1-hexene content (lower than tion rates of M fractions which are led by
2 mol%). In contrast, the low temperature the lowest l-hexene component and are
peak increases over 20 degrees with significantly higher than those of HPBDs at
increasing molecular weight, indicating matched branching content.
molecules with higher branching content The compositional heterogeneity of M
(>2 mol%), or a lower density component. fractions leads to lamellar morphologies
The 1-hexene content of the latter that clearly differ from those of homo-
decreases with increasing molecular weight, genous matched copolymers, as found in
as it is inferred by the corresponding the representative TEM images given in
increase in melting temperature. Since Figure 9. Here the morphology of M-F9 is
the NMR determined branching content compared with a compositionally matched
(listed on Table 1) is the average value from narrow metallocene under the same slow
both compositions weighted by the relative crystallization. The bimodal lamellar size
mass of all components in each M fraction, distribution seen in M-F9 (left micrograph)
Figure 9.
TEM micrographs of M-F9 (1.81 mol% branches, Mw ¼ 234,000 g/mol) (left), and narrow metallocene ethylene
1-hexene (2.2 mol% branches, Mw ¼ 221,000 g/mol, Mw/Mn ¼ 2.1) (right). Specimens were slowly crystallized
from the melt at 1 8C/min.
Copyright ß 2009 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim www.ms-journal.de
Macromol. Symp. 2009, 282, 1–13 11
contrasts with a more homogeneous lamel- crystal, such as 1-butene and longer linear
lar distribution observed at the same 1-alkenes, the variation of the melting
magnification for a narrow metallocene temperatures of ethylene copolymers with
ethylene l-hexene copolymer of similar mol increasing branching content is analyzed on
% branching. The high-density component the basis of Flory’s phase equilibrium
or lowly branched molecules of M-F9 theory.[19] According to this theory, in
develop long crystalline lamellae, with reference to the value of the pure chain,
thicknesses of 112 Å and spanning lengths the depression of the equilibrium melting
over 1.5 mm, while molecules of M-F9 with temperature of the copolymer is indepen-
higher branching content form much dent of the type of comonomer. It only
shorter lamellae with thicknesses of depends on the crystalline sequence
70 Å. In the random ethylene 1-hexene propagation probability (p). For random
copolymer, the long thick lamellae are copolymers the value of p equals the
absent because the comonomer composi- fraction of ethylene crystalline component.
tion is uniform, thus the average crystal- The melting of compositional TREF frac-
lizable ethylene sequence length is shorter tions is analyzed on this basis to infer the
than the value corresponding to the random intra-molecular distribution. This
lowly branched component in the M-F9 is clearly an advantage of preparative
fraction. Correspondingly, more uniformly TREF over automated techniques, since
arranged, shorter and thinner lamella each fraction can be independently
(90 Å) are observed for the narrow analyzed.
copolymer. T-fractions with < 2 mol % branching
The melting temperatures of TREF follow the random pattern, their melting
fractions are shown vs. mol % of branches behavior is identical to the HPBDs melting.
in Figure 10. The continuous line is the T-fractions with a higher branching display
same as in Figure 8(b), and gives the broader or double melting and deviate from
behavior of narrow random copolymers the observed continuous line of the random
extracted from references 14 and 15. When model copolymers. This suggests an intra-
the comonomer does not participate in the chain distribution of branching that devi-
ates from the random pattern, i.e. the
chains rich in l-hexene posses a more blocky
branching distribution, also supported by
isothermal crystallization studies. Isother-
mally crystallized fractions with a low
branching content melt at progressively
increasing temperatures with increasing Tc
as expected for random copolymers. How-
ever, as shown in the inset of Figure 10,
after isothermal crystallization, the frac-
tions with the highest l-hexene content
(T–F1) have a basically constant melting,
characteristic of a blocky branching dis-
Figure 10. tribution.
Peak melting temperatures versus mol% branching of To test the possibility that higher melt-
compositional fractions (T-Fractions). Square and ing crystallites are formed from lightly
triangles represent higher and lower melting peaks. branched low molecular weight chains that
The continuous line represents the melting behavior
appeared to have been flushed from the
of model random ethylene 1-alkene copolymers
(ethyl and longer branches). The inset displays DSC TREF column together with higher molar
melting thermograms of fraction T-F1 after isothermal mass chains, a detailed solvent non-solvent
crystallization at the indicated crystallization fractionation was carried out on combined
temperatures (Tc). F-T1 to F-T2 fractions. However, very low
Copyright ß 2009 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim www.ms-journal.de
12 Macromol. Symp. 2009, 282, 1–13
Figure 11.
TEM micrographs of T-F4 (2.85 mol% branches, Mw ¼ 207,000 g/mol) (left) and narrow metallocene ethylene
1-hexene (3.0 mol% branches, Mw ¼ 280,000 g/mol, Mw/Mn ¼ 2.1), (right). Specimens were slowly crystallized
from the melt at 1 8C/min.
molar mass chains could not be separated composition of an ethylene 1-hexene film-
from longer ones, the three fractions grade resin with enhanced mechanical
obtained had double melting characteristics performance over classical BOCD resins,
similar to that of the original F-T1 and F- allows comparative details of the bivariate
T2. Therefore, we conclude that long distribution obtained from each set. Both
crystalline sequences responsible for the distributions display the same overall
higher melting appear to be an integral part features. Gas-phase produced resins with
of the long molecules. To further investi- balanced mechanical properties and
gate the intra-molecular branching distri- Elmendorf MD tear > 400 g/mil, have a
bution of T fractions, a comonomer triad unique and complex bimodal distribution
distribution analysis from 13C NMR spectra of 1-hexene over the distribution of chain
is currently under study. lengths. The copolymer displays two major
The lamellar morphology of T fractions components with respect to 1-hexene con-
in the non-random range presents features tent. About 50% by mass are molecules
in agreement with a more blocky branching broadly distributed in chain length with a
distribution. A representative example is low content of 1-hexene (1 mol%). The
given by the TEM micrographs of T-F4 second component are molecules with a
(2.85 mol%, Mw ¼ 207,000 g/mol, left broad range of 1-hexene content (1.5–
image) and a narrowly distributed 11 mol%) and somewhat narrower mole-
metallocene ethylene 1-hexene copolymer cular weight distribution than the range of
(3.0 mol%, Mw ¼ 280,000 g/mol) shown in the first component. This bimodal como-
Figure 11. A more blocky distribution of nomer composition of equal length chains is
comonomer in T-F4 is deduced from the responsible for the observed double melt-
fewer and longer radially oriented lamellae ing of M fractions. The high temperature
as compared with segmented, thinner, and melting, between 125 and 115 8C, corre-
more abundant lamellae of the random sponds to the lowly branched first compo-
narrow copolymer. nent, while the increase of the lower
melting peak from 65 to 85 8C with
molecular weight reflects a progressive
Conclusion decrease of branching content.
In addition, the melting behavior and
The analysis of two sets of fractions crystalline morphology of each fraction,
obtained by molecular weight and comonomer compared with data of model random
Copyright ß 2009 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim www.ms-journal.de
Macromol. Symp. 2009, 282, 1–13 13
Copyright ß 2009 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim www.ms-journal.de