4.5 Article

Effective control of optical purity by chiral HPLC separation for ester-based liquid crystalline materials forming anticlinic smectic phases

Journal

LIQUID CRYSTALS
Volume 48, Issue 1, Pages 43-53

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/02678292.2020.1762937

Keywords

High-performance liquid chromatography; self-assembling behaviour; fluorinated materials; chiral liquid crystals; chiral separation; racemic mixtures

Funding

  1. Military University of Technology [PBS 23-895]
  2. Czech Science Foundation [CSF 19-03564S]
  3. EU COST Action [CA17139]
  4. MEYS [8J20PL008]
  5. Operational Programme Research, Development and Education - European Structural and Investment Funds
  6. Czech Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports [SOLID21 - CZ.02.1.01/0.0/0.0/16_019/0000760]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Effective control of optical purity through chiral separation of (S) and (R) enantiomers is crucial when designing new chiral organic materials. A method using chiral fluorinated liquid-crystalline materials with lateral substitution was developed and verified, with separations performed using chiral high-performance liquid chromatography.
Currently, effective control of optical purity by chiral separation of (S) and (R) enantiomers remains a relevant and highlighted task when designing new chiral organic materials in general, especially for self-assembling materials possessing synclinic and anticlinic smectic phases. An efficient methodology for accomplishing this task was developed and verified with a series of chiral fluorinated liquid-crystalline materials with lateral substitution on the molecular core. The self-assembling behaviour of new racemic materials was established. Upon cooling from the isotropic phase, all materials possessed orthogonal, synclinic and anticlinic smectic mesophases. The materials were available with four fluorine substitution patterns and in racemic and pure (R) and (S) enantiomer forms. Chiral high-performance liquid chromatography was accomplished using polysaccharide-based chiral stationary phases. All separations were performed in normal chromatographic mode, and the baseline separation of all enantiomer pairs was achieved using chiral stationary phases based on derivatised amylose and cellulose. The enantiomer elution order for racemic mixtures was verified by comparing their retention times with those of the respective pure (R) and (S) enantiomers. Interestingly, two materials demonstrated an unexpected switch in enantiomer elution order. This is very important information that is useful, for instance, for potential utilisation in preparative scale chiral chromatography.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available