Effect of oil substitution in chiral microemulsion electrokinetic chromatography
โ Scribed by Melissa D. Mertzman; Joe P. Foley
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2004
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 129 KB
- Volume
- 25
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0173-0835
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โฆ Synopsis
Abstract
In a previous publication (Pascoe, R., Foley, J. P., Analyst 2002, 127, 710โ714 [1]), aย novel chiral microemulsion based on 1.0% w/v dodecoxycarbonylvaline (DDCV), 0.50% v/v ethyl acetate and 1.2% v/v 1โbutanol, was shown to provide rapid enantiomeric separations of various pharmaceutical compounds. The two deficiencies noted with this method were that the peak shapes obtained were asymmetric and the efficiencies were lower than those previously obtained using DDCV micelles (Peterson, A. G., Ahuja, E. S., Foley, J. P., J. Chromatogr. B 1996, 683, 15โ28 [2]). This study examines the use of three alternative lowโinterfacialโtension oils (methyl acetate, methyl propionate, and methyl formate), in combination with DDCV, to characterize their effect on the elution range, efficiency, resolution, and enantioselectivity of various pharmaceutical enantiomers. The oils were evaluated in both the same volume percentage and the same molar concentration as ethyl acetate in the original DDCV microemulsion system. Including ethyl acetate, a total of seven microemulsion systems were examined. For the compounds that were separated, average enantioselectivities ranged from 1.09 to 1.28, with corresponding efficiencies of 14โ000โ20โ000. While some interesting differences were observed, ethyl acetate still proved to be the most advantageous in terms of enantioselectivity, resolution, and elution range.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract CDโmodified microemulsion EKC as a CE technique has been applied to the chiral separation of atropine, scopolamine, ipratropium and homatropine. Enantioseparations of these tropa alkaloids were optimized by using a standard oilโinโwater (__O__/__W__) microemulsion and varying the nature