Journal article

Crystalline degradation products of vancomycin as chiral stationary phase in microcolumn liquid chromatography


Authors listGhassempour, A; Alizadeh, R; Najafi, NM; Karami, A; Römpp, A; Spengler, B; Aboul-Enein, HY

Publication year2008

Pages2339-2345

JournalJournal of Separation Science

Volume number31

Issue number13

ISSN1615-9306

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1002/jssc.200800185

PublisherWiley-VCH Verlag


Abstract
The ability of crystalline degradation products (CDPs) of vancomycin as a chiral stationary phase was reported in a previous study for enantioselective separation of drugs, amino acids and agrochemical toxins by conventional LC column (250 x 4.6 mm). In this work, the potential of CDP of vancomycin for the enantiomeric separation in micro-LC (200 x 1 mm) has been studied. The obtained separation results are better than in our previous study with conventional LC columns. The enantiomers of D,L-phenylalanine, D,L-alanine, methyldopa, atropine and propranolol were used for this evaluation. Experiments have been carried out in a stainless steel tube that was packed with chiral silica particles of 3 and 12 mu m diameters. Also, three different ratios of 3 and 12 pm silica particles were used for packing material of chiral columns and the effect on aspect ratio and resolving powers was compared.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleGhassempour, A., Alizadeh, R., Najafi, N., Karami, A., Römpp, A., Spengler, B., et al. (2008) Crystalline degradation products of vancomycin as chiral stationary phase in microcolumn liquid chromatography, Journal of Separation Science, 31(13), pp. 2339-2345. https://doi.org/10.1002/jssc.200800185

APA Citation styleGhassempour, A., Alizadeh, R., Najafi, N., Karami, A., Römpp, A., Spengler, B., & Aboul-Enein, H. (2008). Crystalline degradation products of vancomycin as chiral stationary phase in microcolumn liquid chromatography. Journal of Separation Science. 31(13), 2339-2345. https://doi.org/10.1002/jssc.200800185


Last updated on 2025-21-05 at 13:49