Pakistan Science Abstracts
Article details & metrics
No Detail Found!!
The role seemingly of amorphous silica gel layers in chiral separations by planar chromatography.
Author(s):
1. Mieczyslaw Sajewicz: Institute of Chemistry, Silesian University, 9 Szkolna Street, 40-006 Katowice, Poland
2. Teresa Kowalska: Institute of Chemistry, Silesian University, 9 Szkolna Street, 40-006 Katowice, Poland
Abstract:
In planar chromatography, silica gel appears as the most frequently used adsorbent. Its preference as planar chromatographic stationary phase is due to its high specific surface area (ca. 700 m2 g-1)and relatively simple active sites (silanol groups, ≡Si-OH). The high specific surface area of silica gel and a high density of coverage of its surface with the silanol active sites contribute jointly to an excellent separation performance of this adsorbent. In our experiments on chiral separation of the enantiomer pairs by planar chromatography, contradictory behavior of the silica gel layers versus the chiral compounds was observed. The migration tracks of chiral compounds in the ascending planar chromatographic mode were not vertical but bent on either side being a function of analyte chirality. This deviation of the analyte`s migration track was noticed, when using the densitometric scanner to quantify the respective chromatograms. In order to confirm the hypothesis as to the microcrystalline nature of silica gel used in liquid chromatography, it was further investigated through circular dichroism (CD) and the data thereof confirmed that the `chromatographic` silica gels are not amorphous but microcrystalline, contributing to the (partial) horizontal enantioseparation of the antimer pairs. This paper summarizes the results of our investigation on the microcrystalline nature of silica gels used in planar chromatography and their impact on enantioseparation of the selected pairs of antimers.
Page(s): 36-40
DOI: DOI not available
Published: Journal: Pakistan Journal of Analytical & Environmental Chemistry, Volume: 8, Issue: 1--2, Year: 2007
Keywords:
Keywords are not available for this article.
References:
References are not available for this document.
Citations
Citations are not available for this document.
0

Citations

0

Downloads

2

Views