Nic Friederichs
SABIC
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Featured researches published by Nic Friederichs.
Chemical Communications | 2004
Nico Adams; Henricus Johannes Arts; Paul D. Bolton; Dan Cowell; Stuart R. Dubberley; Nic Friederichs; Craig M. Grant; Mirko Kranenburg; Andrew J. Sealey; Bing Wang; Paul Wilson; Andrew R. Cowley; Philip Mountford; Martin Schröder
A family of ca. 50 imidotitanium precatalysts [Ti(NR)(Me(3)[9]aneN(3))Cl(2)](R = alkyl or aryl; Me(3)[9]aneN(3)= 1,4,7-trimethyltriazacyclononane) were prepared in good yields using semi-automated procedures; high-throughput screening techniques identified seven highly active ethylene polymerisation precatalysts with activities in the range ca. 3 400 to 10 000 kg(PE) mol(-1) h(-1) bar(-1).
Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter | 2008
Betty Coussens; Peter H. M. Budzelaar; Nic Friederichs
One of the important product parameters of polyolefins is their molecular weight (distribution). A common way to control this parameter is to add molecular hydrogen during the polymerization, which then acts as a chain transfer agent. The factors governing the hydrogen sensitivity of olefin polymerization catalysts are poorly understood and have attracted little attention from computational chemists. To explore the electronic factors determining hydrogen sensitivity we performed density functional calculations on a wide range of simple model systems including some metallocenes and a few basic models of heterogeneous catalysts. As a quantitative measure for hydrogen sensitivity we used the ratio of (i) the rate constant for chain transfer to hydrogen to (ii) the rate constant for ethene insertion, k(h)/k(p) (see the scheme below), and as a measure of electrophilicity we used the energy of complexation to the probe molecule ammonia. [Formula: see text] For isolated species in the gas phase, complexation energies appear to dominate the chemistry. Ethene complexes more strongly than hydrogen and with increasing electrophilicity of the metal centre this difference grows; the hydrogen sensitivity decreases accordingly. Although many factors (like catalyst dormancy and deactivation issues) complicate the comparison with experiment, this result seems to agree both in broad terms with the experimental lower hydrogen sensitivity of heterogeneous catalysts, and more specifically with the increased hydrogen sensitivity of highly alkylated or fused metallocenes. The opposite conclusion reached by Blom (see Blom et al 2002 Macromol. Chem. Phys. 203 381-7) is due to the use of a very different measure of electrophilicity, rather than to different experimental data.
Chemical Reviews | 2005
John R. Severn; John C. Chadwick; Robbert Duchateau; Nic Friederichs
Organometallics | 2006
Nico Adams; Henricus Johannes Arts; Paul D. Bolton; Dan Cowell; Stuart R. Dubberley; Nic Friederichs; Craig M. Grant; Mirko Kranenburg; Andrew J. Sealey; Bing Wang; Paul Wilson; Martin Alexander Zuideveld; Alexander J. Blake; Martin Schröder; Philip Mountford
Organometallics | 2015
Anniina Laine; Betty B. Coussens; Janne T. Hirvi; Alexandra Berthoud; Nic Friederichs; John R. Severn; Mikko Linnolahti
Dalton Transactions | 2013
Fabio Ghiotto; Chrysoula Pateraki; John R. Severn; Nic Friederichs; Manfred Bochmann
Journal of Molecular Catalysis A-chemical | 2005
Nic Friederichs; Bing Wang; Peter H. M. Budzelaar; Betty Coussens
Macromolecular Chemistry and Physics | 2005
Frederik G. Karssenberg; Bing Wang; Nic Friederichs; Vincent Mathot
Chemical Communications | 2004
Nico Adams; Henricus Johannes Arts; Paul D. Bolton; Dan Cowell; Stuart R. Dubberley; Nic Friederichs; Craig M. Grant; Mirko Kranenburg; Andrew J. Sealey; Bing Wang; Paul Wilson; Andrew R. Cowley; Philip Mountford; Martin Schrder
Journal of Organometallic Chemistry | 2007
Peter H. M. Budzelaar; Betty Coussens; Nic Friederichs