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Benzoyl cellulose beads in the pure polymeric form as a new powerful sorbent for the chromatographic resolution of racemates
Author(s) -
Francotte Eric,
Wolf Romain M.
Publication year - 1991
Publication title -
chirality
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.43
H-Index - 77
eISSN - 1520-636X
pISSN - 0899-0042
DOI - 10.1002/chir.530030109
Subject(s) - chemistry , cellulose triacetate , microcrystalline cellulose , cellulose , substituent , polymer , resolution (logic) , organic chemistry , silica gel , sorbent , chiral resolution , chromatography , chemical engineering , enantiomer , adsorption , artificial intelligence , computer science , engineering
Cellulose‐based stationary phases are known to be very efficient and versatile chiral sorbents for the chromatographic resolution of racemates. Except for microcrystalline cellulose triacetate (CTA I), basically all other cellulose‐based phases have been prepared by coating of ca. 20% weight polymer on a wide pore silica gel used as a carrier. In this work we describe the preparation of benzoylcellulose (TBC) beads in the pure polymeric form (without inorganic carrier) from an emulsion of the organic polymer. The new material has been fully characterized and used as a chiral stationary phase for the resolution of various classes of racemic compounds such as benzylic alcohols or acetate derivatives of aliphatic alcohols and diols. The structural variety of the separated solutes as well as the irrational influence of the aromatic substituent in different classes of aryl compounds suggest that multiple interaction sites are involved in the complexation, making a prediction of the separation difficult. The benzoyl cellulose beads exhibit a very high loading capacity, which is particularly useful for preparative purposes as demonstrated for selected examples.