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Dynamic high-resolution computer simulation of isotachophoretic enantiomer separation and zone stability

journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-18, 07:52 authored by Caslavska, J, Michael BreadmoreMichael Breadmore, Thormann, W
The development of electrophoretic computer models and their use for simulation of electrophoretic processes has increased significantly during the last few years. Recently, GENTRANS and SIMUL5 were extended with algorithms that describe chemical equilibria between solutes and a buffer additive in a fast 1:1 interaction process, an approach that enables simulation of the electrophoretic separation of enantiomers. For acidic cationic systems with sodium and H30+ as leading and terminating components, respectively, acetic acid as counter component, charged weak bases as samples, and a neutral CD as chiral selector, the new codes were used to investigate the dynamics of isotachophoretic adjustment of enantiomers, enantiomer separation, boundaries between enantiomers and between an enantiomer and a buffer constituent of like charge, and zone stability. The impact of leader pH, selector concentration, free mobility of the weak base, mobilities of the formed complexes and complexation constants could thereby be elucidated. For selected examples with methadone enantiomers as analytes and (2-hydroxypropyl)-β-CD as selector, simulated zone patterns were found to compare well with those monitored experimentally in capillary setups with two conductivity detectors or an absorbance and a conductivity detector. Simulation represents an elegant way to provide insight into the formation of isotachophoretic boundaries and zone stability in presence of complexation equilibria in a hitherto inaccessible way.

Funding

Australian Research Council

History

Publication title

Electrophoresis

Volume

35

Issue

5

Pagination

625-637

ISSN

0173-0835

Department/School

School of Natural Sciences

Publisher

Wiley-V C H Verlag Gmbh

Place of publication

PO Box 10 11 61, Weinheim, Germany, D-69451

Rights statement

Copyirght 2014 Wiley-VCH

Repository Status

  • Restricted

Socio-economic Objectives

Expanding knowledge in the chemical sciences

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