With the introduction of ultrahigh efficiency columns and fast separations, the need to eliminate peak deformation contributed by the instrument must be effectively solved. Herein, we develop a robust framework to automate deconvolution and minimize its artifacts, such as negative dips, wild noise oscillations, and ringing, by combining regularized deconvolution and Perona−Malik (PM) anisotropic diffusion methods. A asymmetric generalized normal (AGN) function is proposed to model the instrumental response for the first time. With no-column data at various flow rates, the interior point optimization algorithm extracts the parameters describing instrumental distortion. The column-only chromatogram was reconstructed using the Tikhonov regularization technique with minimal instrumental distortion. For illustration, four different chromatography systems are used in fast chiral and achiral separations with 2.1 and 4.6 mm i.d. columns. Ordinary HPLC data can approach highly optimized UHPLC data. Similarly, in fast HPLC-circular dichroism (CD) detection, 8000 plates were gained for a fast chiral separation. Moment analysis of deconvolved peaks confirms correction of the center of mass, variance, skew, and kurtosis. This approach can be easily integrated and used with virtually any separation and detection system to provide enhanced analytical data.
Multidentate ligands involving tethered pyridyl groups coordinated to transition metal ions have been frequently used to mimic the 3-histidine (3H), 2-histidine-1-carboxylate (2H1C) brace motifs or other combinations of histidine and carboxylate endogenous ligating residues found in bioinorganic metalloenzymes. It is of interest to immobilize these ligand chelates onto heterogeneous supports. This, however, requires the use of bromine-substituted (chloromethyl)pyridines, whose current synthetic routes involve the use of extremely pyrophoric chemicals, such as n-butyllithium that require cryogenic reaction conditions, and toxic chemicals, such as thionyl chloride, that are challenging to handle and require extensive hazard controls. Herein, we report alternative methodologies towards the syntheses of 2-bromo-6-hydroxymethylpyridine and 2-bromo-6-chloromethylpyridine from inexpensive commercially available 2,6-dibromopyridine using isopropylmagnesium chloride lithium chloride complex (Turbo Grignard) and cyanuric chloride which are easier to handle and require milder reaction conditions than the conventional reagents. Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) methods were developed and simple 1H- and 13C- nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and Fourier-transform infrared (FT-IR) spectroscopies were also used to monitor the conversion of both reaction steps and showed that products could be obtained and isolated through simple workups without the presence of unreacted starting material or undesired overchlorinated 2-chloro-6-chloromethylpyridine side product.
A majority of enantiomeric separations show some degree
of peak
asymmetry, which is detrimental to quantitative and semiquantitative
chiral analysis. This paper presents a simple and rapid peak symmetrization
algorithm for the correction or reduction of peak tailing or fronting
in exponentially modified Gaussians. Raw chromatographic data can
be symmetrized by adding a correct fraction of the first derivative
to the chromatogram. The area remains invariant since the area under
the first derivative is zero for a pure Gaussian and numerically close
to zero for asymmetric peaks. A method of easily extracting the distortion
parameter is provided, as well as insight into how pre-smoothing the
data with the “perfect smoother” algorithm can suppress
high frequencies effectively. The central difference method is also
used to compute the first derivative, reducing root-mean-square noise
by up to 28% compared to the standard forward difference method. A
survey of 40 chiral separations is presented, demonstrating the range
of asymmetry observed in chiral separations. Examples of symmetrization
of the peaks from enantiomers in comparable and disproportionate concentrations
are also provided. Artifacts of deconvolution are discussed, along
with methods to mitigate such artifacts.
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