A new approach for the evaluation of chiral purity of serine esterification products bearing long-chain alkyl substituents was developed. The compounds were simply converted to aryl-substituted oxazolines which: (i) facilitates effective chromatographic enantioseparation and (ii) enables direct detection using ultraviolet absorption.
The method employs a polysaccharide-based chiral stationary phase and allows enantioseparation of highly stable oxazoline products in less than 6 min using a simple binary mobile phase. As opposed to the previously used normal phase method the developed method was performed in the reversed-phase mode.
Aside from the benefits of switching to less hazardous solvents with regard to the principles of Green Chemistry, this has also led to a reduction in the analysis time. In comparison with known serine chromophores, the best enantioseparation of aryloxazoline rigid structure may be achieved only based on non-polar interactions with the chiral stationary phase.
In contrast, the substitution of the chromophore moiety with hydroxyl substituent affected intra and intermolecular interactions that caused enantioseparation differences. Concurrently, we found high chirality retention of (R)- and (S)-configuration oxazoline standards (>=99% enantiomeric excess) during the introduction of the ultraviolet label.
The method is suitable for rapid injection of the mixture containing the ultraviolet absorption marker without prior purification.