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- Posts: 9
- Joined: Sun Sep 30, 2007 9:27 am
The approach went like this , an existing method utilising THF and Water did not separate to baseline two synthetic analogues of cortisone. A quick bit of analysis using THF,Acetonitrile and methanol at various concentrations did not brink about any real meaningful improvment to the critical pair without seriously affecting or generating any other peaks in the chromatography. examination of the molecularity shows the only difference in the structure ( as confirmed by NMR and Mass sec) of the two molecules is the appearance of an additional double bond in ring A - This lead me to think that my best option is to try and exploit this difference in structure. It follows that 2 double bonds on ring A in a conjugate system must have a higher electron density at ring A and therefore experimenting with ion pair may bring about the separation, not through a truly ion pair chromatography but applying the principles of change affiliation the theory also being that molecule A which has the extra double bond ( and hence the stronger affilitiation due to localised electron density) should retain on the column for longer and come off molecule B. In practice a good separation is observed however molecule A does come off first. This is the bit that is confusing.
Now when you run on a new column, without the ion pair, the separation is not so good- introduction of the ion pair on the same column does improve the chromatography. and so the system is shown to be reliable and reproducible but i do not understand ( and hence my problem) the mechanics as to what is going on
hopefully my logic makes sense
