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Surface Design of Enantiomeric HPLC Separation on Vancomycin and Teicoplanin-Based Stationary Phases, a Tool for Chiral Recognition of Model β-Blockers.

A quality-by-design approach was adopted for enantioseparation of atenolol on Vancomycin and Teicoplanin-based chiral stationary phases using reversed phase (RP) mode and polar ionic mode (PIM), respectively to account for major forces involved in enantiorecognition of β-blockers on macrocyclics. A fractional factorial screening design for the two modes; followed by a central composite optimization design and regression analysis were able to point out critical factors and chromatographic responses and robust surface of the design. Within the studied range of flow the optimal was 0.3 mL/min for Chirobiotic T and 1 mL/min for Chirobiotic V. In PIM, a composition of 100% methanol was mandatory to compromise between best separation and least retention with equal amounts of the acid and base modifiers for enantiomers of atenolol, as model drug in addition to metoprolol and pindolol as structurally related compounds for possible extrapolation of results on members of the same class. However, in RP mode, only triethylamine acetate was needed as buffer for atenolol enantiomers. Chiral recognition of atenolol in both elution modes, further confirmed via extrapolation of the models on the two other β-blockers showed that ionic interactions rather than any other forces governed chiral recognition on the two macrocyclic stationary phases in both modes.

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