In order to assess the effect of support type on the characteristics of polybutene polymers, cyclohexyl imidazolium chloride ionic liquid was grafted onto the surface of various supports including boehmite, halloysite, palygorskite, and kaolinite. The furnished supported ionic liquids were employed alongside AlCl3/ethanol as initiating systems to polymerize C4 monomers, resulting in polybutene polymers. Overall, XRD, FTIR, TGA, SEM, EDS, and Elemental Mapping Analyses convinced the successful homogenous grafting of ionic liquid onto the surface of subjected supports. To obtain precious and essential information about molecular weight, dispersity, and microstructure of polymers, GPC, 1H NMR, and 13C NMR analyses were conducted. Among the four initiating systems, kaolinite supported ionic liquid demonstrated the most satisfying results, Yield = 88.2 %, Mn= 18104 g mol−1, Ð = 1.83, exo= 6.1 % and isobutylene content of 92.5 %. Hence, this supported ionic liquid was fully characterized via SEM, EDX, Elemental Mapping, XRD, FT IR and TGA analyses. To get deeper insight about the type and quantity of molecular interactions in the kaolinite supported ionic liquid, molecular modeling calculation was also considered. Beside efficiently balancing polymerization condition, implementing the AlCl3/ionic liquid initiating system promotes a more environmentally friendly polymerization approach by halving the amount of hazardous AlCl3 compared to the blank system including neat AlCl3 as the single co-initiator.