Issue 41, 2009

Metal-catalysed olefinpolymerisation into the new millennium: a perspective outlook

Abstract

The second half of the last Century is often referred to as ‘the Age of Plastics’. Whether this calls to one's mind the 1963 Nobel Laureates Karl Ziegler and Giulio Natta, or “The Graduate” Ben Braddock of Charles Webb's novel (played by Dustin Hoffman in a 1967 cult movie) being explained that “the future is in plastics”, the conclusion can only be that there is indeed some truth in the definition. But that is over now, and the new Millennium has much more and better to offer than ‘plastics’—or not? This perspective article will not address such an epochal question; more modestly, it will make the point that—at odds with a growing misconception—there is still room for good and useful research in metal-catalysed olefin polymerisation for quite some years to come.

Graphical abstract: Metal-catalysed olefin polymerisation into the new millennium: a perspective outlook

Article information

Article type
Perspective
Submitted
16 Jun 2009
Accepted
18 Aug 2009
First published
03 Sep 2009

Dalton Trans., 2009, 8794-8802

Metal-catalysed olefin polymerisation into the new millennium: a perspective outlook

V. Busico, Dalton Trans., 2009, 8794 DOI: 10.1039/B911862B

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