Abstract

3-Phenyllactic acid is an antimicrobial compound with broad-spectrum activity against various bacteria and fungus. The observed difference in pharmacological activity between optical isomeric 3-phenyllactic acid necessitates a method for enantioseparation. Chiral ligand exchange countercurrent chromatography was investigated for the enantioseparation of 3-phenyllactic acid with a synthesized chiral ligand. A two-phase solvent system was composed of n-butanol/hexane/water (0.4:0.6:1, v/v/v) to which N-n-dodecyl-l-hydroxyproline was added to the organic phase as chiral ligand and cupric acetate was added in the aqueous phase as a transitional metal ion. The influence factors were optimized by enantioselective liquid-liquid extraction. Baseline enantioseparation of racemic 3-phenyllactic acid by analytical high-speed countercurrent chromatography was achieved. The optical purities of enantiomeric 3-phenyllactic acid reached 99.0%, as determined by chiral high-performance liquid chromatography.

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