Title of Invention

LOW GEL CHROMIUM CATALYSIS

Abstract A present invention discloses a process for homopolymerising ethylene or for copolymerising ethylene and a comonomer in the presence of a chromium-based catalyst system in two serially connected loop reactors, wherein the operating conditions are substantially the same in both reactors to obtain a monomodal molecular weight distribution, to produce a final polyethylene resin at a productivity of less than 3500 grams of polymer per gram of supported chromium-based catalyst component and thus at increased throughput, said polyethylene resin being used to prepare films having an amount of gel, defined by the portion of the film surface covered by gel expressed as part per million of surface covered with gel, of at most 30 part per million (ppm).
Full Text LOW GEL CHROMIUM CATALYSIS. -,
3 MAR'
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The present invention discloses a method for reducing gel content in polymers
prepared with chromium-based catalyst systems without reducing the throughput
by using a double loop reactor.
Polyethylene is known for use in the manufacture of a wide variety of articles. The
polyethylene polymerisation process can be varied in a number of respects to
produce a wide variety of resultant polyethylene resins having different physical
properties which render the various resins suitable for use in different applications.
In particular, it is known to use polyethylene for use in applications where the
polyethylene is required to have crack resistance, both resistance to rapid and to
slow crack growth. It is also known to use polyethylene in the manufacture of films
where the polyethylene preferably has a low gel content.
It is known in the art that the physical properties, in particular the mechanical
properties, of a polyethylene product can vary depending on what catalytic system
was employed to make the polyethylene. This is because different catalyst
systems tend to yield different molecular weight distributions in the polyethylene
produced.
For example, EP-A-0829495, EP-A-946611 and EP-A-946612all disclose
processes for producing polyethylene, these processes comprising copolymerising
ethylene and an alpha-olefinic comonomer comprising from 3 to 8 carbon atoms, in
the presence of a chromium-based catalyst in a first reactor to produce a first
polyethylene copolymer product having a first melt index and a first molecular
weight distribution, feeding the first polyethylene copolymer product thereby
produced and the chromium-based catalyst to a second reactor, and in the second
reactor copolymerising ethylene and an alpha-olefinic comonomer comprising from
3 to 8 carbon atoms, in the presence of the chromium-based catalyst under
different polymerisation conditions to produce a second polyethylene copolymer
product having a second melt index and a second molecular weight distribution.

in many prior art polymerisation processes, the amount of ge! is controlled at the
expense of throughput higher residence time is resuiting in higher productivity anc
lower gel content, at the expense of throughput
In a single loop reactor, iow gel content can be obtained by reducing the
throughput for given polymerisation conditions. Alternatively, the activity of the
cataiyst system can be modified either by increasing the amount of
triethyialuminium leading to resins having uncontrollable melt index, or by
increasing the temperature, leading to resins having poor mechanical properties.
It is an aim of the present invention to reduce the amount of gel in the final
polyethylene.
It is another aim of the present invention to retain the throughput in the
polymerisation process.
Accordingly, the present invention provides a process for homopolymerising ethylene
or for copolymerising ethylene and a comonomer in the presence of a chromium-based
catalyst system in two serially connected loop reactors, wherein the operating conditions
are substantially the same in both reactors to obtain a monomodal molecular weight
distribution, to produce a final polyethylene resin at a productivity of less than 3500
grams of polymer per gram of supported chromium-based catalyst component and thus at
increased throughput said polyethylene resin being used to prepare films having an amount
of geL defined by the portion of the film surface covered by gel expressed as part per million
of surface covered with gel, of at most 30 part per million (pprn).
The polymer fractions produced in each reactor are of the same nature: either they
are both hamopoiymers or they are both copolymers. Preferably: they are
copolymers. Preferably, the polyethylene is a copolymer of ethylene and the
comonomer is an alpha-olefin having from 3 to 8 carbon atoms.
The polyethylene resin can be used to prepare films having reduced gel content

The productivity is less than 3500, preferably less than 2500 grams of polymer per
gram of supported chromium-based catalyst component and the gel content is
preferably of at most 30 ppm or of at most 600 per m2
The chromium based catalyst component is not particularly limited and can be any
chromium-based catalyst system disclosed in prior art such as for example the
chromium-based catalyst component supported on a silica-titania support disclosed
in EP-A-905145 or such as a chromium-based catalyst component supported on a
silica support.
Preferably the chromium-based catalyst comprises a supported chromium oxide
catalyst having a titania-containing support, for example a composite silica and
titania support. A particularly preferred chromium-based catalyst component may
comprise from 0.5 to 5 wt% chromium, preferably around 1 wt% chromium, such as
0.9 wt% chromium based on the weight of the chromium-containing catalyst. The
support comprises at least 1 wt% titanium, preferably around 2 to 3 wt% titanium,
more preferably around 2.3 wt% titanium based on the weight of the chromium
containing catalyst. The chromium-based catalyst may have a specific surface
area of from 200 to 700 m2/g, preferably from 400 to 550 m2/g and a pore volume of
greater than 1.8 cc/g preferably from 2 to 3 cc/g.
A particularly preferred chromium-based catalyst ("Catalyst 1") for use in the
present invention comprises a catalyst which has an average pore radius of 190A,
a pore volume of around 2.1 cc/g, a specific surface area of around 510 m2/g and a
chromium content of around 0.9 wt% based on the weight of the chromium-
containing catalyst. The support comprises a composite silica and titania support.
The amount of titania in the support provides that the catalyst as a whole comprises
around 2.3 wt% titanium.
The catalyst may be subjected to an initial activation step in air at an elevated
activation temperature. The activation temperature preferably ranges from 500 to
850°C, more preferably 600 to 750 °C.

In order to enhance the degree of comonomer incorporation into the polyethylene
resin (thereby to lower the density of the resin), the catalyst preferably has a high
surface area, preferably greater than 400m2/g, a large pore volume, preferably
larger than 1.8 cc/g, and it may or may not be fiuorinated prior to activation. If it is
fluorinated, it has a fluorine content of around 1 wt%.
One or more organoaluminium compounds can be used as co-catalysts. An
organoaluminium represented by the formula AIR3 can be used wherein each R is
the same or different and is selected from halides or from alkoxy or alkyl groups
having from 1 to 12 carbon atoms. Especially suitable aluminium alkyls are
trialkylaluminium, the most employed being triethylaluminium (TEAL).
In the first loop reactor, preferably ethylene monomer and an alpha-olefinic
comonomer comprising from 3 to 8 carbon atoms are fed thereinto in the liquid
phase, typically in an inert diluent, preferably isobutane, together with a chromium-
based catalyst. Typically, the copolymerisation is performed at a temperature of
from 90 to 105°C, more typically around 100 "C, and at a pressure of from 20 to 60
bars, more typically around 42 bars. A diluent under supercritical conditions may
also be employed in the polymerisation process, wherein the pressure of the
supercritical diluent is of from 37 to 100 bars and the temperature of from 70 to 140
°C.
The comonomer preferably comprises 1-hexene, but may alternatively comprise
any one or more of 1-butene, 1-pentene, 4-methyl-1-pentene, 1-heptene or 1-
octene.
Typically, the ethylene monomer comprises from 2 to 10% by weight and the
comonomer comprises from 0.2 to 4% by weight, each based on the total weight of
the monomer and comonomer in the inert diluent A typical polymerisation medium
may for example comprise, in an inert diluent such as for example isobutane, an
ethylene flow of from 2 to 10 wt%, and a 1-hexene flow of up to 4 wt%.

In the first loop reactor, a first polyethylene resin is produced by copolymerisation of
the ethylene and the comonomer. In accordance with the preferred process, in the
first loop reactor the process variables such as the ethylene flow rate and the
temperature are controlled so as to produce a polyethylene resin having a specified
high load melt index (HLMI) yielding the required mechanical properties of the
resin. Typically, the HLMI ranges from 5 to 35 g/10min, and is most typically from 8
to 25 g/10min. The high load melt index is determined using the procedures of
ASTM D1238 using a load of 21.6kg at a temperature of 190°C. The HLMI is
broadly inversely indicative of the molecular weight of the polymer. In other words,
a low melt index is indicative of a high molecular weight for the polyethylene, and
vice versa. The amount of comonomer fed to the first reactor controls the density
of the polyethylene fraction produced in said first reactor.
The first polyethylene product, together with unreacted ethylene and comonomer in
the inert diluent, is fed to the second loop reactor serially connected thereto and
additional monomer (ethylene) and comonomer are fed into the second reactor.
The same chromium-based catalyst is present in the second reactor as in the first
reactor. In the second loop reactor, the process parameters are varied to produce
therein a second polyethylene product having other properties. The properties.pf
the first and second polyethylene resins are selected in order to obtain a final
polyethylene resin that has the desired properties. The final polyethylene resin can
have a monomodal or a broad or bimodal molecular weight distribution. The
molecular weight distribution is defined by the polydispersity index D that is the
ratio Mw/Mn of the weight average molecular weight Mw to the number average
molecular weight Mn. In order to obtain a monomodal molecular weight distribution,
the operating conditions are substantially the same in both reactors. A broad
molecular weight distribution on the contrary requires different operating conditions
in both reactors.
The polyethylene products prepared according to the present invention are
characterised by very low heterogeneity; They can be used to prepare films having
a very low gel content. The gel content in a film is measured by the number of gels
per m2 of film, or by the amount of gel defined as the portion of the film surface

covered by gel expressed as part per million of surface covered with gel (ppm), and
by the mean gel size. A small mean gel size is also observed. It is known in the art
that the amount of gel decreases with increasing productivity. Typically low catalyst
productivity is a consequence of low residence time. In order to increase the plant
output, it is desired to reduce the residence time and therefore the productivity,
thereby increasing the amount of gel, which is unavoidable in a single loop reactor
The present invention provides a process whereby the amount of gel is
substantially decreased even at low productivity and thus at high plant throughput,
by using two serially connected loop reactors. This can be seen in Figure 1 that
represents the amount of gel expressed in ppm as a function of productivity
expressed in grams of polyethylene per gram of catalyst for a resin prepared in a
double loop reactor, for a resin exiting the first reactor and for a prior art resin. It is
observed on that Figure that, at equivalent productivity, the resins of the present
invention have a significantly lower gel content than the prior art resins, at same
productivity. The amount of gel contained in the final polyethylene film is at most 30
ppm. More importantly, at same productivity, the amount of gel is substantially
reduced.
These polyethylene resins can be used to prepare films, fibres or bottles with low
gel content.
The low gel polyethylene resins of the present invention are suitable for preparing
films.
Figure 1 represents the amount of gel expressed in ppm as a function of
productivity expressed in grams of polyethylene per gram of catalyst, for a resin
prepared in a double loop reactor, for a resin exiting the first reactor and a prior art
resin.
Figure 2 represents a photograph of the gels in resin R1 retrieved respectively from
the first (Figure 2a) and from the second reactor (Figure 2b).

Figure 3 represents the gel size distribution for resin R1: it is the number cf counts
as a function of size expressed in mm. The dashed line represents the resin exiting
the first reactor and the solid line represents the resin exiting the second reactor.
Figure 4 represents the gel size distribution for resin R2: if is the number of counts
as a function of size expressed in mm. The dashed line represents the resin exiting
the first reactor and the solid line represents the resin exiting the second reactor.
Examples.
The commercial catalyst Magnapore 963 produced by Grace Davison was
fluorinated using NH4BF4 in order to contain 1 wt% of fluor. It was then activated by
heating at a temperature of 635 "C. The cocatalyst was triethylaluminium (TEAL): it
was introduced in the first reactor with the chromium-based catalyst in amounts
specified in table I. No TEAL was added in the second reactor.
Final resins R1 and R3 were prepared using the same conditions in both reactors:
they had a monomodal polydispersity.
Final resins R2 and R4 were prepared using different reactor conditions, targeting
reduced hexene incorporation in the low molecular weight species produced in the
first reactor. They had a broad polydispersity.
The production conditions for resins R1 to R4 are summarised in Table I.




Resin samples were retrieved from both the first reactor and the second reactor.
They were extruded on a small laboratory extruder to form pellets and the pellets
were then extruded to produce films having a thickness of 50 microns. The gels
absorb more light than the polyethylene film and they are thus detected above an
absorption threshold, high absorption threshold meaning high detection sensitivity.
The gel level was determined by sending a beam of light through the film and by
measuring the light transmitted through said film with a digital camera. The
equipment used was as follows:
- The extruder to prepare the films was a Brabender E19/25D (table model)
equipped with a 1.2 kW motor, a screw speed regulator of from 1 to 100
rpm, and three zones for temperature control of 1300 W each.
- The light source was a halogen lamp DDL, cold light 150 W, 20 A equipped
with an optical cross section converter.
- The camera was a digital linear camera having a line length of 2048 pixels,
each pixel having a dimension of 14 microns x 14 microns, a dynamic range
of 1000:1, a pixel frequency of 30 MHz, an inspection width of about 100 mm
and a resolution of about 50 microns.
- The image-processing unit was an Intel 586/133 MHz processor with a
memory of 16Mb RAM, a hard disk of 1.6 Gb, a graphic monitor VGA high
resolution, 1024x768, low radiation, a capacity of 12,000,000 pixels/sec.
The results are summarised in Table III.


it is observed that the fraction of film surface covered with gel or amount of gel in
the first reactor is about 10 times larger than in the second reactor. It is therefore
concluded that the gels found in the first reactor are not merely diluted by the
product made in the second reactor but that they are destroyed by the
polymerisation occurring in the second reactor.
Without wishing to be bound by a theory, it is believed that this result is typical of
the resins produced with a chromium-based catalyst system. It is believed that the
gels created in the first reactor are partly caused by poorly reacted catalyst grains
that are in or have just ended their induction period before polymerisation. This can
be seen in Figure 2 representing a photograph of the gels in resin R1 retrieved
respectively from the first (Figure 2a) and from the second reactor (Figure 2b). One
can see large catalyst residues in Figure 2a, appearing as the white comet-shaped
marks below the gels represented as black spherical marks. On Figure 2b this
phenomenon is significantly reduced for both the white comet-shaped marks and
for the dark spherical marks.
The gel size distribution is represented in Figure 3 for resin R1 and in Figure 4 for
resin R2. Comparing these two figures, it was observed that the monomodal resin
R1 had a smaller gel size in the second reactor than in the first reactor whereas
that behaviour was not observed for the bimodal resin R2. The gels had the same
size distribution in both reactors for resin R2, although the overall gel content was
decreased.

WE CLAIM:
1. A Process for homopolymerising ethylene or for copolymerising ethylene and a comonomer in
the presence of a chromium-based catalyst system in two serially connected loop reactors,
wherein the operating conditions are substantially the same in both reactors to obtain a
monomodal molecular weight distribution, to produce a final polyethylene resin at a
productivity of less than 3500 grams of polymer per gram of supported chromium-based
catalyst component and thus at increased throughput, said polyethylene resin being used to
prepare films having an amount of gel, defined by the portion of the film surface covered by gel
expressed as part per million of surface covered with gel, of at most 30 part per million (ppm).
2. The process as claimed in claim 1, wherein the polyethylene is a copolymer of ethylene.
3. The process as claimed in claim 2, wherein the comonomer is an alpha-olefin having from 3 to
8 carbon atoms.
4. The process as as claimed in any one of the preceding claims, wherein the final polyethylene is
prepared with a productivity of less than 2500 grams of polymer per gram of supported
chromium-based catalyst component.


A present invention discloses a process for homopolymerising ethylene or for copolymerising
ethylene and a comonomer in the presence of a chromium-based catalyst system in two serially
connected loop reactors, wherein the operating conditions are substantially the same in both reactors to
obtain a monomodal molecular weight distribution, to produce a final polyethylene resin at a
productivity of less than 3500 grams of polymer per gram of supported chromium-based catalyst
component and thus at increased throughput, said polyethylene resin being used to prepare films having
an amount of gel, defined by the portion of the film surface covered by gel expressed as part per
million of surface covered with gel, of at most 30 part per million (ppm).

Documents:

02060-kolnp-2006 abstract.pdf

02060-kolnp-2006 assignment.pdf

02060-kolnp-2006 claims.pdf

02060-kolnp-2006 correspondence others.pdf

02060-kolnp-2006 description (complete).pdf

02060-kolnp-2006 drawings.pdf

02060-kolnp-2006 form-1.pdf

02060-kolnp-2006 form-3.pdf

02060-kolnp-2006 form-5.pdf

02060-kolnp-2006 international publication.pdf

02060-kolnp-2006 international search report.pdf

02060-kolnp-2006 priority document.pdf

2060-KOLNP-2006-ABSTRACT 1.1.pdf

2060-KOLNP-2006-ASSIGNMENT.1.2.pdf

2060-KOLNP-2006-CLAIMS.pdf

2060-KOLNP-2006-CORRESPONDENCE.1.2.pdf

2060-KOLNP-2006-DESCRIPTION (COMPLETE) 1.1.pdf

2060-KOLNP-2006-DRAWINGS 1.1.pdf

2060-KOLNP-2006-EXAMINATION REPORT REPLY RECIEVED.pdf

2060-KOLNP-2006-EXAMINATION REPORT.1.2.pdf

2060-KOLNP-2006-FORM 1 1.1.pdf

2060-KOLNP-2006-FORM 18.1.2.pdf

2060-kolnp-2006-form 18.pdf

2060-KOLNP-2006-FORM 2.pdf

2060-KOLNP-2006-FORM 3 1.1.pdf

2060-KOLNP-2006-FORM 3.1.2.pdf

2060-KOLNP-2006-FORM 5.1.2.pdf

2060-KOLNP-2006-GPA.1.2.pdf

2060-KOLNP-2006-GRANTED-ABSTRACT.pdf

2060-KOLNP-2006-GRANTED-CLAIMS.pdf

2060-KOLNP-2006-GRANTED-DESCRIPTION (COMPLETE).pdf

2060-KOLNP-2006-GRANTED-DRAWINGS.pdf

2060-KOLNP-2006-GRANTED-FORM 1.pdf

2060-KOLNP-2006-GRANTED-FORM 2.pdf

2060-KOLNP-2006-GRANTED-SPECIFICATION.pdf

2060-KOLNP-2006-OTHERS.1.2.pdf

2060-KOLNP-2006-OTHERS.pdf

2060-KOLNP-2006-PETITION UNDER RULE 137.pdf

2060-KOLNP-2006-REPLY TO EXAMINATION REPORT.1.2.pdf


Patent Number 250554
Indian Patent Application Number 2060/KOLNP/2006
PG Journal Number 02/2012
Publication Date 13-Jan-2012
Grant Date 10-Jan-2012
Date of Filing 21-Jul-2006
Name of Patentee TOTAL PETROCHEMICALS RESEARCH FELUY
Applicant Address ZONE INDUSTRIELLE C, B-7181 SENEFFE (FELUY)BELGIUM
Inventors:
# Inventor's Name Inventor's Address
1 BODART, PHILIPPE RUE AUX GRANGES, 108, B-4480 CLERMONT SOUS HUY (ENGIS) BELGIUM
2 DAMME, ERIC CHAUSSEE DE MONSTREUX 7, B-7181 ARQUENNES, BELGIUM
3 MARECHAL, PHILIPPE VIEUX CHEMIN DE SENEFFE, 19 / BTE 73, B-1400 NIVELLES, BELGIUM
PCT International Classification Number C08F 2/00
PCT International Application Number PCT/EP2005/050523
PCT International Filing date 2005-02-08
PCT Conventions:
# PCT Application Number Date of Convention Priority Country
1 04100587.7 2004-02-13 Belgium