Elucidation of the Enantiodiscrimination Properties of a Nonracemic Chiral Alignment Medium through Gel-based Capillary Electrochromatography: Separation of the Mefloquine Stereoisomers
Enantiodiscrimination and enantioseparation are two highly
important processes in chemistry, often performed by using
NMR spectroscopy and chromatography. For a better understanding
of the mechanistic details, the same system should
be studied by both methods. In addition, isotropic and anisotropic
NMR parameters should be obtained, the latter using
alignment media so that residual dipolar couplings and chemical-
shift anisotropies can be measured. Consequently, a chiral
alignment medium was used for the first time in chiral gelbased
capillary electrochromatography with the four stereoisomers
of the antimalaria drug mefloquine as test compounds.
Chromatographic data verify that enantiodiscrimination obtained
with this alignment gel is caused by differences in the
equilibrium constants related to associate formation. Hence,
the chromatographic separation provides physicochemical
data that form a basis for the understanding and optimization
of alignment processes, and vice versa.