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Today, we'll be talking about
how to separate enantiomers
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from each other.
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Enantiomers are like your
left and right hands.
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They are mirror
images of each other,
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but they look almost identical.
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Remember that much like we
use right and left to describe
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which hand is which, scientists
use the letters S and R
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to designate which
enantiomer is which,
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when you only have
one chiral center.
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However, when you have
multiple chiral centers,
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there are other ways of
designating enantiomers.
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But we won't be getting
into that today,
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because that's much
more complicated.
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Here we have a set
of enantiomers.
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This is the S confirmation
of thalidomide,
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and here on the right
is the R confirmation.
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Why does it matter that we have
two different confirmations?
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Well, you can see the
difference quite clearly
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at the chiral center,
where one of the groups
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points into the screen and the
other points out of the screen.
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And just because of the
simple change in confirmation,
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that S version was found to
lead to terrible birth defects
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when consumed by mothers.
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And because of
this, drug companies
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now try to make sure that the
active ingredient in their drug
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is only one
particular enantiomer.
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So how would we go about
separating these two?
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One technique that you
could use is chiral column
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chromatography.
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You would need a stationary
phase that is chiral,
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meaning something that
will only bind either
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to the R confirmation or the
S confirmation of your desired
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enantiomer.
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So how does the chiral
stationary phase only
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bind to one of the enantiomers?
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Picture the two enantiomers
as your right and left hand.
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If your right hand tries
to shake another person's
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right hand it seems normal,
the two fit together properly.
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But if your right hand tries
to shake your own left hand,
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it doesn't seem like
they line up quite right.
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That's the exact same
thing that happens
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with the chiral stationary
phase and the wrong enantiomer.
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Next, what you do is you'd load
that mixture of enantiomers.
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So on top here, you
might see that you
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have some kind of
band of your mixture.
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This is racemic,
meaning that it has
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a 50/50 mixture of enantiomers.
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So that's what you're
seeing here in the yellow.
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If we take a closer
look, you'll see
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that this has some
of the S confirmation
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and some of the R
confirmation too thrown in.
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And as this moves through
the stationary phase,
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so once you open up the
stop cock, what you'll see
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is that if the R
enantiomer was the one that
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binds tightly to the
stationary phase,
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it won't move very quickly.
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But with the S enantiomer,
it might be racing through
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since it's not
really interacting
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that much with the
stationary phase,
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and prefers to interact
with the mobile phase.
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Once you've collected all of
the S enantiomers in your flask,
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all you'll have
left in the column
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is the R enantiomer, which
is pretty tightly bound
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to the chiral stationary phase.
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Next, what you'd do is
when you have this column,
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you'd want to pour
in lots of solvent
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so that you can get the
R enantiomer to come out.
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Because as this pushes
down through the column,
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it will take the R
enantiomer with it,
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giving you just the R
enantiomer in your flask.
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And there you've done a
successful chiral resolution.
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The same principle can also be
applied to gas chromatography.
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Let's quickly review how
gas chromatography works.
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You insert your sample in
here, a gas flows through,
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and then it goes into
this long to that
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contains the stationary
phase and mobile phase,
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and goes to the detector.
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And if we were to
zoom in on this--
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and draw this just
kind of a long tube--
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again what you'd see is that if
this time the stationary phase
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was attracted to the
S enantiomer instead,
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you'd see that the S enantiomer
is sticking to the sides,
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sticking to the
stationary phase,
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while the R enantiomer races
through with the mobile phase.
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So there are actually
a number of other ways
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you can separate
enantiomers, but those
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tend to be much
more complicated.
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These are just two of the
common ways you can do it.
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And in both of
them, whether you're
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doing column chromatography with
a solid stationary phase or gas
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chromatography was a
liquid stationary phase,
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the important thing to remember
is that your stationary phase
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should be chiral and bind to
the enantiomer that you want.
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