* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Derivatization of polar compounds for GC - Sigma
George S. Hammond wikipedia , lookup
Kinetic resolution wikipedia , lookup
Ring-closing metathesis wikipedia , lookup
Physical organic chemistry wikipedia , lookup
Bottromycin wikipedia , lookup
Baylis–Hillman reaction wikipedia , lookup
Hofmann–Löffler reaction wikipedia , lookup
Organosulfur compounds wikipedia , lookup
Hydroformylation wikipedia , lookup
Enantioselective synthesis wikipedia , lookup
Stille reaction wikipedia , lookup
Asymmetric induction wikipedia , lookup
Strychnine total synthesis wikipedia , lookup
Derivatization of polar compounds for GC Dr. Frank Michel [email protected] sigma-aldrich.com Agenda •Introduction •Basic reactions • Silylation • Acylation • Alkylation • Esterification and transesterification •Developing a method •Troubleshooting 2 Basic Information •What is derivatization? • Changing the chemical characteristics of an analyte by reaction with an active agent •Why do derivatization? • To make it possible to analyze a compound(s) of interest using a specific chromatographic technique 3 Benefits of Derivatization •Gas Chromatography • Increasing volatility or thermal stability – Ex.: Analysis of fatty acids as their methyl esters – Ex.: Analysis of sugars by GC • Decreasing reactivity – Ex.: Analysis of highly polar compounds by GC • Increasing sensitivity – Ex.: Making a molecule detectable by an ECD • Increasing chiral recognition in GC – Ex.: Derivatization decreases boiling point and chiral recognition is usually better at lower temperatures – Ex.: Chiral recognition becomes better with different ligands 4 Benefits of Derivatization •HPLC • Improve detectability or sensitivity – Ex.: Use of reagents to increase UV or fluorescence absorption • Decreasing reactivity – Ex.: Analysis of highly polar compounds by GC •TLC • Make spots visible •Chiral • Convert a mixture of enantiomers to diastereomers by reacting them with one pure enantiomeric reagent and separate the diastereomers on a non-chiral column 5 Types of Derivatization for GC • Silylation • Acylation • Alkylation • Esterification and transesterification 6 Silylation: Replaces an active hydrogen on an OH, SH, or NH group: Sample-OH + R3Si-X Sample-O-SiR3 + HX •Hydrogen replacement - reduces dipole-dipole interactions, increases volatility •Reaction mechanism: nucleophilic attack on the silicon atom in the silylating reagent •For completion of the reaction, the basicity of the leaving group on the silyating reagent (X), must be greater than the group to be replaced on the sample •Ease of silylation generally follows this trend: • Alcohol > phenol > carboxylic acid > amine > amide • Alcohols and Amines: 1° > 2° > 3° 7 Silylation For: •Amines, Amides, Alcohols, Thiols, Phenols, Enols, Carboxylic acids Possible Reagents: •Based on derivatives of Trimethylsilyl-, t-Butyldimethylsilyl- and other Alkylsilyl or Arylsilyl- functional groups 8 Acylation: Replaces an active hydrogen with an acyl group O Sample-OH + R-C-X O Sample-O-C-R + HX •Derivative is less polar and more volatile than the parent compound •Can be used to add a “protecting” group to heat sensitive compounds •Reaction mechanism can involve nucleophilic, electrophilic, or free radical displacement 9 Acylation For: •Amines, amides, alcohols, thiols, phenols, enols, glycols, unsaturated compounds (C=C), aromatic rings Possible Reagents: •Acid anhydrides, Acid halides, Reactive acyl derivatives such as acylated imidazoles, acylated amides, or acylated phenols 10 Alkylation: Replaces an active hydrogen with an alkyl group Sample-OH + R-X Sample-OR + HX •Derivative is less polar and more volatile than the parent compound •Can be used to add a “protecting” group to heat sensitive compounds •Most common use is the derivatization of organic acids prior to GC analysis •Principal reaction involves nucleophilic displacement •The less acidic H is, the more strongly basic the catalyst must be 11 Alkylation For: •Carboxylic acids, Amines, Amides, Alcohols, Thiols, Phenols and Enols Possible Reagents: •Alkyl halides, Nitro substituted chloro or fluorobenzenes, Tetraalkylammonium hydroxides, Dimethylformamide dialkyl acetals, Diazoalkanes •Reagent strength depends on the acidity of the hydrogen to be replaced • More acidic => weaker reagent – Ex: phenols, carboxylic acids • Less acidic => stronger reagent – Ex: alcohols, amides 12 Esterification •Used for the derivatization of organic acids • Fatty acids to fatty acid methyl esters •Uses an alcoholic reagent and acid catalyst • A volatile catalyst (such as HCl) should be used •Involves the condensation of the carboxyl group in the acid and the hydroxyl group in an alcoholic reagent, with the elimination of water •To help drive the reaction, water should be removed as it is formed O O R OH + H+ R'OH R OR' + H2O 13 Transesterification: •Used to displace the alkoxy group in an ester with another alcohol, producing a new ester and new alcohol •Occurs when the ester is solvated by the alcoholic reagent • An excess of the alcohol must be present • To drive the reaction, the new alcohol should be removed as it is formed •Both acidic or basic catalysts are used • Basic catalysts: transesterification of fats and triglycerides O O R H+ or OH- + OR'' R'OH R OR' + R''OH 14 Choosing the best derivatization reagent •Choice of derivatising reagent depends on: • Functional group to be derivatised – OH, COOH, NH, etc. • Molecular structur – Acidity of hydrogen – Sterical hindrance • Consideration of final analytical method – GC column (e.g. Wax phases are not compatible with silylderivatives) – Detection (FID, ECD, MSD?) • Literature – Publications – Manufacturer informations 15 What is the best derivatization reagent? •Reagent sampler kits 16 Choosing a Derivatization Reagent: Common Silylation Reagents Reagent Abbreviation Applications N,O-bis(trimethylsilyl)acetamide BSA OH, COOH, amides, amines N,O-bis(trimethylsilyl)trifluoroacetamide BSTFA OH, Ar-OH, COOH, carbohydrates, amides, amines, acid anhydrides, sulfonamides Dimethyldichlorosilane DMDCS Deactivating glass Hexamethyldisilazane HMDS OH, Ar-OH, COOH, amines N-t-butyldimethylsilylimidazole TBDMSIM Unhindered OH and Ar-OH Trimethylchlorosilane TMCS Silylation catalyst; used w/other reagents N-trimethylsilylimidazole TMSI OH, COOH, carbohydrates, fatty acids, sulfonic acids, Ar-OH, R-SH BSA + TMCS OH, alkaloids, amines, biogenic amines, carbohydrates, COOH, Ar-OH, steroids BSA + TMCS + TMSI OH, amines, amides, amino acids, COOH, Ar-OH, steroids BSTFA + TMCS OH, alkaloids, amides, amines, biogenic amines, COOH, Ar-OH, steroids HMDS + TMCS Amino acids, amipicillin, carbohydrates HMDS + TMCS + pyridine OH, bile acids, carbohydrates, Ar-OH, steroids, sterols, sugards TMSI + pyridine C=O, steroids 17 Choosing a Derivatization Reagent: Common Acylation Reagents Reagent Abbreviation Acetic Anhydride Trifluoroacetic acid Applications OH, Ar-OH, carbohydrates, amines TFA Amides, amines, C=O, OH, sulfonamides, silyl catalyst Trifluoroacetic acid TFAA Pentafluoropropionic acid anhydride PFPA Heptafluorobutyric acid anhydride HFPA OH, amino acids, amides, amines, Ar-OH, steroids 18 Choosing a Derivatization Reagent: Common Alkylation/Esterification Reagents Reagent Abbreviation Boron trichloride-2-chloroethanol Applications Esterifying/halogenation for ECD work Phenoxy acid herbicides Boron trichloride-Methanol BCl3-MeOH COOH, transesterification Boron trifluoride-Butanol BF3-BuOH Short chain carboxylic acids, transesterification Boron trifluoride-Methanol BF3-MeOH Long chain carboxylic acids, transesterification Methanolic Sulfuric acid MeOH-H2SO4 COOH, transesterification Methanolic base (metallic sodium in methanol) Na in MeOH Transesterification of triglycerides, cholesteryl esters, phospholipids Methanolic HCl MeOH-HCl Fatty acids Pentafluorobenzyl bromide PFBBr Halogenated derivatives of COOH, mercaptans, ArOH, sufonamides Trimethylanilinium hydroxide TMAH Carbamates, hydroxyl amines, barbituates 19 Reaction Solvent •Must not be capable of reacting with the derivatization reagent • Non-protic solvents •Can be used to facilitate the derivatization reaction • Common solvents: ACN, pyridine, DMF, DMSO, THF •Use the highest purity possible • Be aware of any added preservatives •In some cases, the derivatization reagent can act as the solvent • Excess may have to be removed prior to chromatographic analysis 20 Reaction Temperature and Time •Start with what is recommended in the literature • Used by others; application specific • Recommended by reagent manufacturer •Increase or decrease if necessary • Increase if yield is not sufficient • Decrease if interfering side reactions are evident 21 Confirming the Identity of the Derivative •A Mass selective detector (MSD) is an invaluable tool •If derivatizing a mixture, do each analyte separately if possible • This will help in identifying multiple derivatives •ALWAYS do a derivative blank along with the sample • Blank should contain the reagent and any solvents used • It will help ensure that “artifact” peaks are not missidentified as analyte derivatives in the final sample 22 Using an MSD to Identify Derivatives • There will be an increase in molecular weight • Calculate the total increase based on the derivative type and number of active H+’s replaced Functional Group Derivative Increase in MW per group OH, COOH, NH, NH2 TMS 72 NH2 TMS 144 (if 2 H replaced) OH, COOH, NH, NH2 TBDMS 114 OH, NH, NH2 Acetyl 42 COOH Methyl ester 14 NH, NH2 TFA 96 • Look for logical losses in the mass spectrum based on the MW of the derivatized functional groups 23 Using an MSD to Identify Derivatives Example: TBDMS derivative of valine Abundance Scan 153 (3.569 min): 1624_55_INST04_20070105006.D 186 1600000 H3 C M-159 H3C H3 C 1400000 1200000 CH3 CH3 MW=345 NH H3C 73 M-85 800000 260 600000 H3C 400000 M-15 200000 103 126 100 330 216239 150 200 250 300 355 387 415 443 475 503 350 400 Si CH3 CH3 CH 3 15 = CH3 H3C 57 = C(CH3)3 85 = C(CH3)3 + CO 159 = C(O) –O-C(CH3)3 M-57 288 147 O CH3 O 1000000 0 Si 450 500 549 550 m/z--> The molecular weight of underivatized valine is 117. With the addition of two TBDMS groups, it is now 345. 24 Equipment for derivatisation •Vials/Reaction vessels •Syringes •Concentrator/Evaporator •Block Heater 25 Micro reaction vessels •Useful for small samples sizes •Can withstand heating •Contain volume graduations • These graduations are not accurate! Do not use for measuring exact volumes. 26 Syringes •Clean & dry • Removable needle • Plunger guides • Chaney adapter 27 Concentrator/Evaporator •To dry sample prior to derivatization •To remove unwanted solvents prior to GC analysis 28 Block Heater •Should have variable temperature control •During use, always monitor temperature with a thermometer 29 Moisture •For many derivatization reactions, water is the enemy • Interferes by competing with the sample for the derivatization reaction • Both degradation of reagents and derivatives themselves •Sufficiently dry samples prior to derivatization • This can be done with gentle heating and/or under a stream of dry nitrogen •If there is high humidity in the room, it may be helpful to store syringes, vials, etc. in a dry box •Silyl reagents are used in excess and can tolerate very small amounts of moisture – but still try to keep things dry! •Chemical removal of water by 2,2-dimethoxypropane 30 Handling of Reagents •Once opened, store reagents in tightly closed containers in a dry environment •Allow refrigerated reagents to come to room temperature prior to use •Gently mix reagents prior to use (including those in sealed ampules) •BSTFA will darken when exposed to moisture • Colorless/light yellow =>yellow/amber •Silyl reagents can withstand small amounts of moisture • Water reacts with reagent and is removed chemically • To be applied in excess 31 Chromatographic Issues •Byproducts • Does the procedure produce byproducts that may be detrimental to the chromatographic column or interfere with the analysis? For example, inorganic acids •Detector fouling • Use of silylating reagents consistently may cause buildup on a flame ionization detector (FID) •Column compatibility • If excess derivatization reagent is present, is it compatible with your GC column? For example silyl derivatives should not be analyzed on a polyethylene glycol (PEG) based phase such as SUPELCOWAX or Carbowax 32 What if, the results are not as expected? •Missing peaks and low response (poor yield) • Reagent is bad/not fresh any more • Insufficient reagent amount • Wrong reagent used (not reactive enough for sample) • Reaction temperature and / or time too low • Interferences in the reaction mixture (such as water) •Additional peaks • Impurities from solvents, reaction vessel, and/or reagents used • Side products from derivatization reaction • Decomposition products of the derivative itself 33 Troubleshooting, Example 1: Interference from a contaminant contaminant 1,3-diolein derivative; poor response 0 10 Sample prepared with contaminated pipette 20 Time (min) 1,3-diolein derivative 0 10 Sample prepared with clean pipette 20 Time (min) 34 Troubleshooting, Example 2: Insufficient volume of derivatization reagent No BSTFA 1 2 1: 1-Decanol 50 µl BSTFA 1 2 2: Tridecane 3 3: 1-Decanol-TMS ether 1000 µL BSTFA 3 2 35 Brochure „Derivatization Reagents“ (KDI) • Products sorted by technique (GC, HPLC, TLC and Chiral) • Reagents also listed by application • Vials, syringes and other useful items for derivatization reactions • Up-to-date application information and references • Some tips and tricks for derivatization • Articles on special derivatization procedures 36 Web Page •www.sigma-aldrich.com/derivatization 37 Technical Literature 38 Dziękuję za uwagę! 39