Han, X. published the artcileSuper/subcritical fluid chromatography separations with four synthetic polymeric chiral stationary phases, Related Products of esters-buliding-blocks, the publication is Chromatographia (2007), 65(7/8), 381-400, database is CAplus.
New synthetic polymeric chiral selectors were developed recently as chiral stationary phases. They were tested with supercritical fluid mobile phases made of CO2 plus an alc. modifier and 0.2% volume/volume trifluoroacetic acid. The polymeric N,N’-(1S,2S)-1,2-cyclohexanediyl-bis-2-propenamide (P-CAP), the polymeric N,N’-[(1R,2R)-1,2-diphenyl-1,2-ethanediyl] bis-2-propenamide (P-CAP-DP), the polymeric trans-9,10-dihydro-9,10-ethanoanthracene-(11S,12S)-11,12-dicarboxylic acid bis-4-vinylphenylamide (DEABV) and the polymeric N,N’-[(1R,2R)-1,2-diphenyl-1,2-ethanediyl] bis-4-vinylbenzamide (DPEVB) were bonded to 5 μm silica particles and used to prepare four columns that were tested with a set of 88 chiral compounds with a wide variety of chem. functionalities. All 88 test compounds were separated on one or more of these related polymeric CSPs. Forty-three enantiomeric pairs were separated in SFC conditions by only one of the CSPs. Twenty pairs were separated by two CSPs and 18 and 7 enantiomeric pairs were separated by 3 and all 4 CSPs, resp. The three P-CAP, P-CAP-DP and DEABV CSPs have equivalent success being able to sep. 49 enantiomeric pairs of the studied set with resp. 12, 14 and 20 at baseline (Rs > 1.5). The DPEVB CSP was significantly less efficient separating only 18 chiral compounds with only one at baseline. The great advantage of the SFC mobile phases is the rapid separation, which most achieved in <5 min.
Chromatographia published new progress about 126613-06-7. 126613-06-7 belongs to esters-buliding-blocks, auxiliary class Chiral Diphenols, name is (R)-[1,1′-Binaphthalene]-2,2′-diyl bis(trifluoromethanesulfonate), and the molecular formula is C22H12F6O6S2, Related Products of esters-buliding-blocks.
Referemce:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ester,
Ester – an overview | ScienceDirect Topics