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Separation and Isolation of Plant Constituents Anna Drew Plants -> chemicals • Secondary metabolites • (Primary metabolites – sugars, amino acids etc – essential functions eg absorbing water) • Many functions • (Until 1990s thought to be waste products) • Growth – Sensory devices – proteins in light-sensitive compounds – Roots can detect nitrates and ammonium salts in soil • Reproduction – Produce chemicals to attract pollinators • Protection – Bioactive compounds that affect living cells » Eg caterpillar eating leaf produce chemical to attract wasp “Crude drugs” • Dried plant parts used in medicinal preparations • Complex mixtures of cells and chemicals • Previously many used in form of alcoholic extracts (tinctures) • Today pure isolated active principles used • Not always possible: • Difficult to separate – more economic to use extracts • Unstable when isolated • Active principles not known – activity thought from mixture • Pharmacist needs basic knowledge of the ways in which drug plants can be extracted and tested for presence of active principles • Quality assurance Isolation • Dried powdered plant material • Extracted with solvent • by maceration or percolation • Unwanted or insoluble material filtered off • Extract concentrated • to low volume under reduced pressure – (minimum decomposition of thermolabile substances) • Further purification • to remove unwanted chemicals – chlorophylls, pigments, fats, waxes, oils, resins, proteins, carbohydrates • using one or more: – partition between immiscible solvents (to separate un/wanted) – selective precipitation by adding selected reagents – chromatographic techniques or physical processes (crystallisation, distillation) Purity • … of isolated active principle via specific tests: • • • • • • • melting point boiling point optical rotation chemical tests* chromatographic data (Rf, Rt values) spectral data (UV, IR, MS) biological evaluation Natural products • Majority used medicinally are of following types: • • • • • • • Alkaloids Glycosides Volatile oils Fixed oils Resins Tannins Polysaccharides CHROMATOGRAPHY “The uniform percolation of a fluid through a column of finely divided substance, which selectively retards certain components of a mixture” (Martin) - Mobile phase - Stationary phase F1 = impelling force (hydrodynamic) F2 = retarding force (molecular frictional forces) More definitions • Stationary phase: – solid or liquid – facilitates separation by selectively retarding the solute by: • Adsorption (adsorption chromatography) • Partition (partition chromatography) • Mobile phase: – Moving solvent flowing over stationary phase that takes solutes with it. Gas or liquid. • Solid support: – In partition chromatography stationary liquid must be held in position on an inert support material. This is solid support and is evenly coated with stationary liquid. • Elution: – When the separation of solutes is complete they are recovered from the stationary phase (solid or liquid) by washing with suitable solvent. Classification • (1) Closed column chromatography – stationary phase is packed inside a column – mobile phase + solute flows through the column -> separation – two forms according to mobile phase type • Liquid chromatography • Gas chromatography • (2) Open column chromatography (a) Paper chromatography • sheet of paper is used to support the stationary phase (b) Thin-layer chromatography • adsorbent is spread evenly over the surface of a flat sheet of glass Mechanisms of separation • depends on distribution of solutes between mobile and stationary phase • Adsorption: between liquid and solid phases • Partition: between two liquids or gas/liquid phase • distribution ratio: • ratio of amount of solute retained in one phase to the amount in the other – Adsorption coefficient (a) – Partition coefficient (α) • ADSORPTION – In a solid/liquid two phase system higher concentration of solute molecules will be found at the surface of the solid than in liquid phase – Arises because of attraction between surface molecules of solid and molecules in liquid phase. (1) Chemisorption – Irreversible - chemical interaction between solute and solid surface (2) Physical adsorption – Reversible – electrostatic forces, dipole interactions, Van de Waal’s forces • In a dilute solution adsorption of a solute may be described by the empirical Freudlich equation: x/m = kcn x/m = amount adsorbed per unit weight of adsorbent k & n = constants c = concentration • If x/m is plotted against concentration an isotherm is obtained: • Equation holds – at constant temperature – over limited concentration range • Assumptions – no chemisorption occurs – only a mono-layer is formed – the number of active sites is constant and propertional to adsorbent weight • However a solution is a binary system and • preferential adsorption depends on • solute-solvent interactions • solute-solvent affinities for the adsorbent surface • In fact a composite isotherm is produced • both molecular species at solid surface • If more than one solute present • competition for active sites on adsorbent surface • chromatographic separation not always predictable • Freudlich equation only holds true for • dilute solutions - concentration dependent adsorption • At higher concentrations • plateau obtained when all active sites are full • adsorption is concentration independent • AVOID in chromatography • Chromatography – only dilute solutions used – on relatively weak adsorbents – separation by physical adsorption • Factors affecting adsorption – govern migration of solute – depend on relative strengths of following molecular interactions: – – – – – solute – solute solute – solvent solvent – solvent solute and solvent affinities for active sites effect of molecules in adsorbed state • PARTITION – If a solute in introduced into a system of two liquid phases and is soluble in both it will distribute itself between the phases according to its relative solubility in each – Function of the nature of solvent and solute – Ratio in which it distributes itself is the partition coefficient (α) • Constant at – constant temperature – over a limited range of concentration α = c A / cB cA and cB are solute concentrations in solvents A and B • Equation describes a partition isotherm • Linear over a greater range of concentrations • If more than one solute present – (always the case in chromatography) – distribution of each solute is independent of others Ion exchange • … consists of an insoluble matrix with chemically bound charged groups and mobile counter ions • The counter ion reversibly exchanges with other ions of the same charge without any changes to the insoluble matrix: • Separation of a mixed solute consists of binding all solute to matrix then recovering one bound species at a time • Conditions (pH, ionic strength) required to liberate species are determined by electrical properties Diffusion methods • Molecular diffusion can be used to separate a mixed solute • In absence of specific binding factors, the rate of diffusion of solute in a stabilising medium (semipermeable membrane, gel) depends on • radius of solute molecule • viscosity of medium • temperature • Can be considered to contain pores • allows certain size molecules to diffuse through • when washed through a column or along a thin film of gel with solvent larger molecules will move further Electrophoretic mobilities • Consider a zone of solute in a stabilising gel – will diffuse slowly to equilibrium • In the absence of specific binding effects, movement can be directed by applying an electric potential across the gel • Molecules acquire charges in aqueous solution and move according to: • • • • charge on the species electric retarding force due to counter-ion atmosphere viscous resistance of medium (giving different mobility) constants of the apparatus Chromatography isotherms • Mechanism of separation is never completely one of the following: • • • • Adsorption Partition Ion-exchange Diffusion • Mixture of all –> “sorption” isotherms • describes conditions encountered not process Factors affecting migration: [1] The adsorbent • Classified into polar and non-polar types [->] – Non-polar » weak adsorbent forces – Van de Waal’s forces – Polar » stronger - dipole forces, hydrogen bonding between active site on solid surface and solute • Strength of adsorbent modified by – Particle size » surface area – more active sites if smaller – Moisture content » higher with polar adsorbents (free moisture held by Hbonding) » heating will drive off moisture [A] Strong polar adsorbents – – – – low water content alumina Fullers Earth charcoal silicic acid [B] Medium polar adsorbents – – – – high water content alumina silica gel magnesium hydroxide calcium carbonate [C] Weak adsorbents – Polar: » sugar » cellulose » starch – Non-polar: » talc » Kieselguhr and celite • [2] Nature of solvent – Graded by powers of elution [->] • More polar the solvent greater eluting power – in open-column chromatography pushed further • Adsorption strongest from non-polar solvents in which solute is sparingly soluble – solvent-solute affinity weak – solute-adsorbent affinity strong • Moderate or non-polar base solvent is chosen – other solvents are added to increase or decrease Rfvalue according to nature of solutes to be separated Light petroleum Cyclohexane Toluene Benzene Dichloromethane Chloroform Ether Ethyl acetate Acetone N-propanol Ethanol Water Pyridine Acetic acid [Trapps, 1940] ↓ eluting power increasing ↓ [3] Structure of solute [A] Molecular weight • Non-polar adsorbents: – adsorption increases (Rf-value ↓) with increased molecular weight [Traube’s Rule] • Polar adsorbents: – adsorption decreases with increased molecular weight [Reverse Traube’s Rule] – polar groupings between solute-adsorbent important – side chain dilutes this [B] Nature of constituent groups • functional groups which H-bond • dipole interactions • ionised forms – play major roles in determining solute migration • Alkaloids - pKa of nitrogen group important – bases of varying strengths – ionise at different pH’s • ionised form more strongly adsorbed than un-ionised form • pH of solvents and stationary phase has to be controlled – Some have more than one ionised form due to more than one basic group • - > multi-spot formation • Substituents groups modify effects of pKa and molecular weight on migration: • • • • • • • • R-COOH R-OH R-NH2 R-COOCH3 R-N(CH3)2 R-NO2 R-OCH3 R-H Polar – strong adsorbent affinity, low Rf ↓ active site affinities [Brookmann] Non-polar – weak adsorbent, high Rf • Unsaturation in a molecule -> lower Rf • Eg aromatic rings – due to greater electron density associate with π orbital electrons in the ring