Description and evaluation of chiral interactive sites on bonded Cyclodextrin stationary phases for liquid chromatography

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Abstract

Development of chiral separations has been essential to the drug discovery and development process. The solubility requirements for a number of methods and/or the mobile phase requirements for application of certain detection systems have opened up many opportunities for cyclodextrin-based CSPs for liquid chromatography. Even though a few chiral stationary phases cover a wide area of enantioselectivity, they do not meet the entire needs of the industry. Cyclodextrin phases offer some unique mechanisms and opportunities to resolve chiral separation problems especially in the aqueous reversed-phase and non-aqueous polar organic modes. This chapter addresses the need to understand the chiral stationary phase structure, the mechanisms at work, and the role mobile phase composition plays in driving those mechanisms to produce enantioselectivity. In addition, the development of certain derivatives has played an essential part in expanding that basic role for certain chiral separations. What these derivatives contribute in concert with the basic structure is a critical part of the understanding to the effective use of these phases. During this study it was determined that the role of steric hindrance has been vastly underestimated, both to the extent that it has occurred and to its effectiveness for obtaining enantioselectivity. References to the entire 20-year history of the cyclodextrin phase development and application literature up to this current date have been reviewed and incorporated. © 2010 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg.

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Beesley, T. E. (2010). Description and evaluation of chiral interactive sites on bonded Cyclodextrin stationary phases for liquid chromatography. In Chiral Recognition in Separation Methods: Mechanisms and Applications (pp. 53–76). Springer Berlin Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-12445-7_3

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