Electrospun Cellulosic Membranes toward Efficient Chiral Resolutions via Enantioselective Permeation.
Issei OtsukaKritika PandeyHamed Ahmadi-NohadaniSteve Nono-TagnePublished in: ACS macro letters (2021)
Cellulose tris(3,5-dimethylphenylcarbamate) (CDMPC), known as one of the most versatile chiral selectors packed in columns for chiral chromatography, is electrospun for the first time. The electrospun nanofibers with a mean diameter of 329 nm form a self-standing nonwoven textile with a specific surface area of 5.6 m 2 /g. The textile is sandwiched between commercially available polytetrafluoroethylene membrane filters as a support material to fabricate a CDMPC membrane system for the chiral resolution of a racemic mixture, ( R , S )-1-(1-naphthyl)ethanol. A vacuum filtration of the racemic mixture through the membrane system using a mixed solvent of n -hexane/2-propanol = 9/1 (v/v) enriches the S -enantiomer in the filtrate due to an enantioselective sorption of the R -enantiomer. The sorption capacity can be regenerated repeatedly via extractions of the adsorbed enantiomers from the membrane system after the filtrations. By repeating the vacuum filtration-extraction process for 15 cycles, the enantiomeric excess ( e.e. ) of the S -isomer in the filtrate increases up to 32.9%.