RESUMO
Because of its high conductivity when acid doped, polyaniline is known as a synthetic metal and is used in a wide range of applications, such as supercapacitors, biosensors, electrochromic devices, or solar and fuel cells. Emeraldine is the partly oxidized, stable form of polyaniline, consisting of alternating diaminobenzenoid and iminoquinoid segments. When acidified, the nitrogen atoms of emeraldine become protonated. Due to electrostatic repulsion between positive charges, the polarity and morphology of emeraldine chains presumably change; however, the protonation effects on emeraldine have not yet been clarified. Thus, we investigated these changes by reversed-phase capillary liquid chromatography using a linear solvation energy relationship approach to assess differences in dominant retention interactions under a significantly varied mobile phase pH. We observed that hydrophobicity dominates the intermolecular interactions under both acidic and alkaline eluent conditions, albeit to different extents. Therefore, by tuning the mobile phase pH, we can even modulate the retention of neutral hydrophobic solutes, such as aromatic hydrocarbons, because the pH-dependent charge and structure of polymer chains of the emeraldine-coated silica stationary phase show a mixed-mode separation mechanism.
RESUMO
A polyaniline coating was used to modify the surface of bare silica gel and octadecyl silica stationary phases to characterize the properties of altered materials. It was assumed that the mixed-mode retention was established on the basis of the polyaniline chemical structure and its combination with the original sorbents. Polyaniline was deposited onto the original surfaces during the chemical polymerization of aniline hydrochloride. The prepared materials were slurry packed into capillary columns and systematic chromatographic characterization was performed using the linear solvation energy relationship, also employing descriptors that allow inclusion of ionic interactions in the proposed retention mechanism. The retention times of 80 solutes with various chemical structures were measured in the hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography mode. The obtained results demonstrated the significant contribution of the polyaniline coating to the retention mechanism under the given conditions; the assumed mixed-mode retention was confirmed. The dominant retention interaction for both modified stationary phases was based on the protonation of nitrogen atoms in the polyaniline structure, leading to suitable retention and selectivity for the hydrophilic analytes, especially anionic and zwitterionic species. Thus, especially, the polyaniline-coated bare silica gel sorbent seems to be promising for potential applications related to the separation of polar compounds.
RESUMO
Dasatinib is a novel oral prescription drug proposed for treating adult patients with chronic myeloid leukemia. Three analytical methods, namely ultra high performance liquid chromatography, capillary zone electrophoresis, and sequential injection analysis, were developed, validated, and compared for determination of the drug in the tablet dosage form. The total analysis time of optimized ultra high performance liquid chromatography and capillary zone electrophoresis methods was 2.0 and 2.2 min, respectively. Direct ultraviolet detection with detection wavelength of 322 nm was employed in both cases. The optimized sequential injection analysis method was based on spectrophotometric detection of dasatinib after a simple colorimetric reaction with folin ciocalteau reagent forming a blue-colored complex with an absorbance maximum at 745 nm. The total analysis time was 2.5 min. The ultra high performance liquid chromatography method provided the lowest detection and quantitation limits and the most precise and accurate results. All three newly developed methods were demonstrated to be specific, linear, sensitive, precise, and accurate, providing results satisfactorily meeting the requirements of the pharmaceutical industry, and can be employed for the routine determination of the active pharmaceutical ingredient in the tablet dosage form.
Assuntos
Química Farmacêutica/métodos , Cromatografia Líquida de Alta Pressão , Dasatinibe/análise , Eletroforese Capilar , Espectrofotometria , Comprimidos/química , Química Farmacêutica/normas , Humanos , Limite de Detecção , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes , Comprimidos/normasRESUMO
A new, fast, selective, and reliable capillary electrophoresis method has been developed for analysis of selected phosphoesters (phosphoserine, phosphoethanolamine, phosphoglycerol) and phosphate. The method is based on separation of specific phosphate containing headgroups (phosphoesters) which are cleaved from the glycerol skeleton of a phospholipid by a regioselective enzyme (phospholipase C). Analysis of intact phospholipids with the same polar headgroup but different fatty acids shows that fatty acid composition has a high impact on separation of phospholipids, so analysis of separated polar headgroups, which avoids this influence, represents a much more suitable approach for phospholipid class research. Optimization of method parameters results in running buffers of relatively narrow pH interval (pH about 10) where all phosphoesters are separated. Further method validation has shown that direct UV detection has a sufficient detection limit for all analytes to perform suitable analyses of cell membrane lipids. The optimized method was tested on the lysate of cell membrane of Bacillus subtilis, where all analytes were determined.
Assuntos
Bacillus subtilis/química , Membrana Celular/química , Eletroforese Capilar/métodos , Fosfatos/análise , Fosfolipídeos/análise , Fosfolipídeos/química , Fracionamento Celular , Fosfatos/química , Fosfolipases Tipo C/químicaRESUMO
This work deals with the development and optimization of the sample pretreatment and consequent electrophoretic analysis of two modern plating baths containing chromium(III) and either citric acid or oxalic acid. Some model mixtures containing known amounts of components of industrial baths have been prepared to simulate simplified bath matrices. Prior to analysis, a sample pretreatment consisting of the addition of some agents that could release acid from the stable chromium complex was tested. Determination of organic anions was accomplished by indirect UV detection. The best results were achieved by precipitation of chromium(III) hydroxide. The content of oxalate and citrate in real samples was calculated as 96.5% (SD 2.3%) and 97.3% (SD 0.8%), respectively, of the declared amount. Very good robustness of the method and satisfactory repeatability of migration time and peak area were obtained. This simple inexpensive method is suitable for routine determination of citric and oxalic acid in chromium(III)-based plating baths.