13C NMR spectroscopy for the differentiation of enantiomers using chiral solvating agents.

ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY(2013)

Cited 34|Views2
No score
Abstract
The utility of C-13 NMR spectroscopy for the differentiation of enantiomers using chiral solvating agents (CSA) is stated. Three examples involving the enantiodifferentiation of a drug, a metabolite and a reactant in aqueous and organic solutions have been chosen to show it. The intrinsic high dispersion of C-13 nucleus, as well as the singlet nature of the signals in standard experiments makes C-13 NMR experiments a powerful alternative or complement to H-1 NMR experiments; specially, when studying pure compounds with complex proton spectra or mixtures of compounds, as in chiral metabonomics, where severe overlapping exists in proton spectrum. To evaluate and compare the quality of the enantioresolution of a NMR signal we introduce the enantiodifferentiation quotient, E, that considers the complexity of H-1 multiplets (and in general the width) of the original signal. It has been observed that the error in the measurement of the enantiomeric molar ratio can be related to the E value. The sensitivity and experimental time of a wide range of chiral analyte concentrations were also assessed.
More
Translated text
Key words
Enantioselective Analysis,NMR Spectroscopy
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined