Abstract

The adsorption of TiCl4 on the surfaces of MgCl2 crystals has been investigated by means of state-of-the-art periodic hybrid DFT methods, as the first step of a comprehensive study aiming to elucidate the structure of the active species in industrial MgCl2-supported Ziegler–Natta catalysts for ethene and propene polymerization. A first distinctive feature of the approach was the thorough evaluation of dispersion forces, crucial because the binding of TiCl4 on MgCl2 surfaces turned out to be essentially dispersion-driven. Also important was a careful investigation of the effects of different choices on basis set and density functional (DF) on the quantitative aspects of the results; this allowed us to trace the unusually large disagreement in the previous literature and identify unambiguous trends. In particular, three full sets of calculations were run adopting the B3LYP(-D), PBE0(-D) and M06 approximations; to the best of our knowledge, the last represents the first case of M06 functional implementation in a periodic code (CRYSTAL) of widespread use. The results consistently indicated that the adsorption of TiCl4 on well-formed MgCl2 crystals under conditions relevant for catalysis can only occur on MgCl2(110) or equivalent lateral faces, whereas the interaction with MgCl2(104) – for decades claimed as the most important surface in stereoselective catalysts – is too weak for the formation of stable adducts. The implications of these findings for catalysis are discussed.

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