posted on 2022-08-24, 16:05authored byGioacchino Luca Losacco, Ryan D. Cohen, Jimmy O. DaSilva, Imad A. Haidar Ahmad, Edward C. Sherer, Ian Mangion, Erik L. Regalado
Isolation and chemical characterization of target components
in
fast-paced pharmaceutical laboratories can often be challenging, especially
when dealing with mixtures of closely related, possibly unstable species.
Traditionally, this process involves intense labor and manual intervention
including chromatographic method development and optimization, fraction
collection, and drying processes prior to NMR analyses for unambiguous
structure elucidation. To circumvent these challenges, a foundational
framework for the proper utilization of supercritical carbon dioxide
(scCO2) and deuterated modifiers (CD3OD) in
sub/supercritical fluid chromatography (SFC) is herein introduced.
This facilitates a streamlined multicomponent isolation with minimized
protic residues, further enabling immediate NMR analysis. In addition
to bypassing tedious drying processes and minimizing analyte degradation,
this approach (complementary to traditional reversed-phase liquid
chromatography, RPLC) delivers highly efficient separations and automated
fraction collection using readily available analytical/midscale SFC
instrumentation. A series of diverse analytes across a wide spectrum
of chemical properties (acid, basic, and neutral), combined with different
stationary-phase columns in SFC are investigated using both a protic
organic modifier (CH3OH) and its deuterated counterpart
(CD3OD). The power of this framework is demonstrated with
pharmaceutically relevant applications in the context of target characterization
and analysis of complex multicomponent reaction mixtures from modern
synthetic chemistry, demonstrating high isolation yields while reducing
both the environmental footprint and manual intervention. This workflow
enables unambiguous fast-paced structure elucidation on the analytical
scale, providing results that are comparable to traditional, but time-consuming,
RPLC purification approaches.