Enantioselective potential of polysaccharide-based chiral stationary phases in supercritical fluid chromatography
Language English Country United States Media print-electronic
Document type Journal Article
PubMed
28436118
DOI
10.1002/chir.22701
Knihovny.cz E-resources
- Keywords
- amylose, biologically active compounds, cellulose, chiral separation, chiral stationary phase, enantioselectivity, supercritical fluid chromatography,
- MeSH
- Chemical Fractionation methods MeSH
- Silicon Dioxide chemistry MeSH
- Polysaccharides chemistry MeSH
- Stereoisomerism MeSH
- Chromatography, Supercritical Fluid methods MeSH
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
- Names of Substances
- Silicon Dioxide MeSH
- Polysaccharides MeSH
The enantioselective potential of two polysaccharide-based chiral stationary phases for analysis of chiral structurally diverse biologically active compounds was evaluated in supercritical fluid chromatography using a set of 52 analytes. The chiral selectors immobilized on 2.5 μm silica particles were tris-(3,5-dimethylphenylcarmabate) derivatives of cellulose or amylose. The influence of the polysaccharide backbone, different organic modifiers, and different mobile phase additives on retention and enantioseparation was monitored. Conditions for fast baseline enantioseparation were found for the majority of the compounds. The success rate of baseline and partial enantioseparation with cellulose-based chiral stationary phase was 51.9% and 15.4%, respectively. Using amylose-based chiral stationary phase we obtained 76.9% of baseline enantioseparations and 9.6% of partial enantioseparations of the tested compounds. The best results on cellulose-based chiral stationary phase were achieved particularly with propane-2-ol and a mixture of isopropylamine and trifluoroacetic acid as organic modifier and additive to CO2 , respectively. Methanol and basic additive isopropylamine were preferred on amylose-based chiral stationary phase. The complementary enantioselectivity of the cellulose- and amylose-based chiral stationary phases allows separation of the majority of the tested structurally different compounds. Separation systems were found to be directly applicable for analyses of biologically active compounds of interest.
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